Tag Archives: mark monitor

Mon 31st August 2015
Written by The Domains in EN and tagged
What Do Big Brands Pay To Protect & Buy Domains? Wikileaks Give Some Clues: Hint "A Lot" - What do big companies that use brand protection company’s to register and buy domain names spend to protect, acquire, register and renew domain names? WikiLeaks.org published invoices from MarkMonitor to Sony, documents (PDF) In those invoices published by WikiLeaks , MarkMonitor.com billed Sony $1,000 several times for a “Domain Acquisition Fee” for domain names that are not owned by Sony. WOF.com, is for an example (page 60 in the pdf) a domain Sony does not own, nor has ever owned, according ... read more ...
Wed 18th September 2013
Written by DomainNameWire in EN and tagged
Southwest Airlines bags BagsFlyFree.com domain name - Domain name complements no bag fee marketing efforts. Charging for bags has been the saving grace of the airline industry in recent years. Airlines that don’t charge for luggage – most notably Southwest Airlines – have done a lot to promote that they aren’t stiffing customers. Southwest has run a number of humorous commercials promoting that “Bags Fly Free”, and now it has the BagsFlyFree.com domain name to go with it. Until recently the domain name was ... read more ...
Sat 19th May 2012
Written by DomainNameWire in EN and tagged
Did Google only buy G.me? - G.me now registered to brand protection company. The whois record for the domain name G.me recently changed to DNStination Inc., which is the proxy service for brand protection company Mark Monitor: The change was just triggered on DomainTools yesterday, although the record shows it was altered on April 20. The domain name was previously a registry reserved domain name. Although nothing is definitive, there’s a good possibility that Google is the new owner. Google ... read more ...
Tue 8th May 2012
Written by DomainNameWire in EN and tagged
.Us whois remoteness is alive and good if we use Mark Monitor - Mark Monitor helps keep .us domain registration records private. It’s been years since the average consumer could register a .us domain name using whois privacy, thanks to a decision by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration. But apparently if you’re a big brand you can still do it. A company recently registered a slew of domain names related to dairy products, including BadDairy.com, DairyBad.com, and Bad-Dairy.com. Whomever registered ... read more ...