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		<title>How to Get an Expiring Domain</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Jun 2009 21:05:41 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[godaddy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2pm]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Backorder]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Contrary To Popular Belief]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Decent Chance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Domain Expiration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Domain Owner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Expiration Date]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Ican]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Laziness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pacific Time]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Procrastination]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Proud Owner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Redemption Period]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Register A Domain]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Register Domain]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shark]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[
Recently found myself in the position of wanting to register a
domain which was owned by someone else. The domain was set to
expire in a week, and I figured there was a decent chance that
the person who owned it wouldn&#8217;t be renewing it. Upon consulting
the WhoIs registry on the current owner, I discovered the guy
was a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<p>Recently found myself in the position of wanting to register a<br />
domain which was owned by someone else. The domain was set to<br />
expire in a week, and I figured there was a decent chance that<br />
the person who owned it wouldn&#8217;t be renewing it. Upon consulting<br />
the WhoIs registry on the current owner, I discovered the guy<br />
was a bit of a domain shark and didn&#8217;t seem to be around anymore.</p>
<p>So I placed a backorder through <a href="http://shadydaddy.com" target=_self>godaddy</a> for $18.95 thinking that<br />
was all I needed to do. During the week that followed, I learned<br />
a lot about the domain expiration process. Two and a half months<br />
and $369 later, I am the proud owner of a shiny new domain. A<br />
really really good one.</p>
<p>This article will explain the domain expiration process and what<br />
you need to do in order to use it to your advantage.</p>
<p><b>How a domain expires</b> Contrary to popular belief, domains<br />
do not expire when they say they do. If the owner of a domain<br />
does not renew by the expiration date of the domain, the domain<br />
goes into &#8220;expired&#8221; status. For 40 days, the domain is in a<br />
grace period where all services are shut off, but the domain<br />
owner may still renew the domain for a standard renewal fee. If<br />
a domain enters this period, it is a good first indicator that<br />
it may not be renewed, but since the owner can re-register<br />
without penalty, it can also just be a sign of laziness or<br />
procrastination.</p>
<p>After 40 days are up, the domain&#8217;s status changes to &#8220;redemption<br />
period&#8221;. During this phase, all WhoIs information begins<br />
disappearing, and more importantly, it now costs the owner an<br />
additional fee to re-activate and re-register the domain. The<br />
fee is currently around $100, depending on your registrar. When<br />
a domain enters its redemption period, it&#8217;s a good bet the owner<br />
has decided not to renew.</p>
<p>Finally, after the redemption period, the domain&#8217;s status will<br />
change to &#8220;locked&#8221; as it enters the deletion phase. The deletion<br />
phase is 5 days long, and on the last day between 11am and 2pm<br />
Pacific time, the name will officially drop from the ICANN<br />
database and will be available for registration by anybody.</p>
<p>The entire process ends exactly 75 days after the listed<br />
expiration date. For an even more detailed explanation, read the<br />
article Inside a Drop Catcher&#8217;s War Room. Landing your domain</p>
<p>So if domains are available to the general public 75 days after<br />
they expire, how do you know your GoDaddy backorder isn&#8217;t one of<br />
many other backorders from other people using other services?<br />
The answer is, you don&#8217;t.</p>
<p>And thus begins the cloak-and-dagger game of &#8220;getting in on The<br />
Drop&#8221;.</p>
<p>&#8220;The Drop&#8221; is the unpredictable three hour period of time in<br />
which the domain is deleted from VeriSign&#8217;s database and<br />
released back into the ecosystem. I briefly thought about trying<br />
to beat GoDaddy to the punch by manually registering my domain<br />
during the drop process, but I quickly found out that there are<br />
no fewer than three major services which specialize in pounding<br />
away on VeriSign&#8217;s servers during the drop period. With their<br />
considerable resources and my measly Powerbook, there was no way<br />
I could compete on their level.</p>
<p>So I decided to enlist the services of all three major domain<br />
snatching firms in hopes that a) one would grab my domain for<br />
me, and b) no one else would be competing against me. The three<br />
services &#8212; Snapnames.com, Enom.com, and Pool.com &#8212;<br />
all operate in a similar manner. They use a network of<br />
registrars to hit the Verisign servers at frequent intervals<br />
(but not too frequent to get banned) and snatch as many<br />
requested names as possible. If you don&#8217;t get your name, you<br />
don&#8217;t pay. But that&#8217;s where the three services begin to differ.<br />
Snapnames.com</p>
<p>Snapnames.com (the exclusive partner of Network Solutions)<br />
charges you $60 for your domain unless there are multiple<br />
suitors, at which point there is an open bid auction between<br />
suitors. Seems fair enough. Snapnames is a bit of a newcomer to<br />
the game, but with their Network Solutions affiliation, they are<br />
said to be improving their success rates. Enom.com Not wanting<br />
to chance it with only one company, I also enlisted Enom to<br />
snatch my domain for me. Enom had reportedly been improving<br />
their &#8220;Club Drop&#8221; service for a year or two and it was now<br />
considered one of the top three. Their fee was only $30 and they<br />
are based in my &#8216;hood (Seattle), so I was hoping they<br />
would be the company to successfully &#8220;work The Drop&#8221; for me.</p>
<p><b>Here&#8217;s where it starts to get sketchy though.</b></p>
<p>Enom claims that the higher your bid is (beyond the $30), the<br />
more &#8220;resources&#8221; they will dedicate to grabbing the domain. What<br />
the hell? How am I supposed to judge that? Does that mean you&#8217;re<br />
using one server now and will use 30 servers if I bid $40? Or<br />
does it mean that you&#8217;re using 30 now and will use 35 if I bid<br />
$1000?</p>
<p>Not knowing exactly what to do, I attempted to bid a couple of<br />
hundred dollars during the last day, but Enom required me to<br />
send them a fax to become a &#8220;verified bidder&#8221;. Since I was at<br />
home that day and only dinosaurs still have fax machines, I was<br />
unable to increase my bid. Oh well, I thought, if someone else<br />
on Enom bids higher, at least I&#8217;ll be able to participate in the<br />
auction. Pool.com</p>
<p>Pool.com is the Scott Boras of domain name grabbing &#8212; the<br />
brilliant, yet conniving agent that players (domains) love and<br />
team owners (prospective domain buyers) hate. Pool plays off the<br />
power of the unknown in such a fiendishly clever way that you<br />
don&#8217;t know whether to hug them or kill them. Here&#8217;s how it works:</p>
<p>Pool is the #1 company around as far as number of servers and<br />
success rates go. You place your original bid for $60 and if<br />
Pool.com grabs your name for you, they send you an e-mail<br />
telling you they&#8217;ve been successful and that you&#8217;ve now entered<br />
&#8220;Phase 1&#8243; of the two-phase auction system. This is the case<br />
whether or not you are the only bidder! Pool.com doesn&#8217;t even<br />
reveal how many bidders there are.</p>
<p>Then, in a Boras-like move of diabolical genius, Pool.com<br />
informs you that you have three days to place a new sealed bid.<br />
If the bid is either one of the top two bids or within 30% of<br />
the top bid, you move on to a one-day open bid auction (the<br />
&#8220;challenger&#8221; auction) for final control of the domain.</p>
<p><b>Grrrrreat.</b></p>
<p>So if I bid $100 and two people bid $140, I don&#8217;t even get to<br />
move on to the final auction! It&#8217;s all designed to get me to up<br />
my sealed bid&#8230; whether or not there are even any other bidders.</p>
<p>Note: One other thing I forgot to mention is that before the<br />
name dropped, I grabbed all .net, .org, and .info variants (all<br />
were available) in order to have more leverage over other<br />
buyers. The chase is on</p>
<p>Right on time, 75 days after the domain expired, I got an e-mail<br />
from Pool.com telling me they&#8217;d secured my domain for me. Great.<br />
Of the four sources I used, Pool.com was the one I least wanted<br />
to deal with. But true to their claims, they ended up being the<br />
best agent of The Drop and had just gotten me one step closer to<br />
my domain. They had A-Rod and I was the Texas Rangers.</p>
<p>Unlike the Texas Rangers, however, I realized I could be bidding<br />
against myself and entered a sealed bid of $302. I chose that<br />
number because it seemed sufficiently high but not so high that<br />
I&#8217;d feel foolish if I was the only bidder. I added the extra two<br />
dollars on the end just to edge out any other people potentially<br />
deciding on $300 as their number.</p>
<p>The next three days were particularly stressful. I had no idea<br />
where I stood, and throughout this entire process, I&#8217;d always<br />
had the sneaking suspicion that the people at these companies<br />
are on the lookout themselves for valuable domains. In other<br />
words, if someone all of a sudden bids $1000 on a domain, will a<br />
domain company decide to snatch it up themselves or &#8220;shill bid&#8221;<br />
against you on it?</p>
<p>Finally the e-mail from Pool arrived and informed me that I had<br />
moved onto the Challenger Auction. There was one other bidder<br />
and they had upped their bid to $312 in order to beat me. Not<br />
too bad, but I had no idea how high that person was willing to<br />
go. I had to decide on a top bid (a la eBay&#8217;s proxy bidding) and<br />
a strategy for when to place it.</p>
<p>True to form, Pool.com&#8217;s auction system squeezes even more money<br />
out of you by making sure the auction doesn&#8217;t end if there&#8217;s a<br />
bid in the last five minutes. In that case, the auction time<br />
keeps extending by five minutes until there are no more bids.</p>
<p>I could try one of two things: Bid high and bid early in an<br />
attempt to scare off the other guy, or lull the other guy to<br />
sleep by doing nothing until the last 6 minutes. I chose the<br />
second method since the ending time was 8am on a Saturday&#8230; a<br />
time when many people are not in front of computers. I set four<br />
alarms for 7:45am Saturday morning, woke up on time, and placed<br />
my bid for $500 when the countdown clock hit 6 minutes.</p>
<p>The system immediately auto-upped the current bid to $369 and I<br />
was the leader. Six nervous minutes, fifty browser refreshes,<br />
and a thousand heartbeats later, my opponent was nowhere to be<br />
found and the domain was mine&#8230; ready for immediate transfer to<br />
Dreamhost, my hosting company of choice.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m still not quite sure whether the person on the other end was<br />
real (although I assume they were), but the bottom line is that<br />
by playing every possible angle, I now have an extremely<br />
valuable domain in my possession for the reasonable sum of $369.<br />
Not valuable because I want to sell it or anything; just<br />
valuable because I want it.</p>
<p>For more articles Please visit <a href="http://www.allwebhosts.com.ru">All Web Hosts</a>.</p>
<p> Arpit<br />http://www.articlesbase.com/web-hosting-articles/how-to-get-an-expiring-domain-2853.html</p>
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<p class='technorati-tags'>Technorati Tags: <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/2pm' rel='tag' target='_blank'>2pm</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Backorder' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Backorder</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Bet' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Bet</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Contrary+To+Popular+Belief' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Contrary To Popular Belief</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Decent+Chance' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Decent Chance</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Domain+Expiration' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Domain Expiration</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Domain+Owner' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Domain Owner</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Expiration+Date' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Expiration Date</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/godaddy' rel='tag' target='_blank'>godaddy</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Grace+Period' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Grace Period</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Ican' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Ican</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Laziness' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Laziness</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Pacific+Time' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Pacific Time</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Procrastination' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Procrastination</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Proud+Owner' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Proud Owner</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Redemption+Period' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Redemption Period</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Register+A+Domain' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Register A Domain</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Register+Domain' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Register Domain</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Shark' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Shark</a>, <a class='technorati-link' href='http://technorati.com/tag/Status+Changes' rel='tag' target='_blank'>Status Changes</a></p>

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