Funny Domain Name Story

When one of my closest friends had his daughter a few years ago, I bought her name .com domain name so she can use it in the Ā future. My friend’s sister created a video of her first few days, and I forwarded the domain name to the YouTube video page. I don’t know if she will ever want to use the domain name, but I am very happy to hang on to it for her.

Earlier this year, my friend and his wife had twins, and I purchased each of their domain names for them. They don’t have public YouTube video, so the domain names were just resolving on the default DNS I have set for the account, which happens to be DomainNameSales.com. Obviously, I didn’t add them to my DNS account, so they just resolve to the general DomainNameSales.com website (until a minute ago when I forwarded them to my friend’s LinkedIn page.

All three of my friend’s children have unique names, so these three domain names were hand registrations.

This afternoon, I received a phone call followed by an email from a broker at Domain Name Sales. No, they were not inquiring about one of the coveted domain names I seem to get inquiries about regularly. The broker was calling to ask if I would sell one of my friend’s domain names. I explained that I bought them on behalf of a friend and wasn’t interested in selling. Perhaps my friend would want to sell it, but that would leave one twin without a domain name.

Of all the domain names I own, this is probably one of the very few I would ever expect to receive an inquiry about!

Elliot Silver
Elliot Silver
About The Author: Elliot Silver is an Internet entrepreneur and publisher of DomainInvesting.com. Elliot is also the founder and President of Top Notch Domains, LLC, a company that has closed eight figures in deals. Please read the DomainInvesting.com Terms of Use page for additional information about the publisher, website comment policy, disclosures, and conflicts of interest. Reach out to Elliot: Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn

8 COMMENTS

  1. I was watching a boxing match and a particular up-and-comer was making a brilliant performance. Knowing what would happen next, I grabbed his name.com and promptly sent a letter to his agent letting him know I grabbed the name and I’d like to transfer it over free of charge, no catch.

    No reply, then three weeks later I get an email from an attorney claiming to represent (Boxer) asking how much I wanted for the domain? I told him nothing, I grabbed it because it only cost me (coupon code), I really enjoyed his performance and if I didn’t get it, someone would have who would’ve demanded payment. I want to give it to him.

    He replies with a THREATENING email demanding that if I don’t provide them with “the login informnation for (my) domain account”, I will be sued for blah blah.

    I told him to go ahead, let me know what day the process server will be coming so I can be sure to be home.

    He then replies puzzled, asking why I am now not interested in giving them the domain?

    Some people are just f*cking stupid.

    • Yes, I believe there is, but this inquiry did not come through my account because the domain name was never added to my account. Since it resolved on the DNS nameservers as a default, the domain resolved to the DNS homepage.

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