Kissmetrics has either sold or lost control of their domain, with no warning

14 points by _ompc ↗ HN
Precursor: I don't like marketing. Not my choice to use Kissmetrics.

So kissmetrics.com is now the SEO blog of someone called Neil Patel. This was apparently announced yesterday (https://twitter.com/Kissmetrics/status/1012074824611459073), albeit only on Twitter and with no prior warning.

I was assuming their domain has been stolen, as well as access to their Twitter account, as this might be the most stupid thing I've seen a company do in a while.

Should we be pulling the KM integration from our software as a security risk?

6 comments

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Hi,

Currently pinned tweet (https://twitter.com/Kissmetrics/status/1012087917727006720) says:

> 1/ Important Kissmetrics Update

> We have moved the Kissmetrics website to the Space Pencil domain. Space Pencil is - and always was - the parent company of Kissmetrics. You can visit here:

> http://www.spacepencil.com/kissmetrics

---

About your security concerns, you better check them with KM. It seems they are just in a middle of an organizational re-structure or something. This doesn't mean that they are hacked or lost control of something.

I find it utterly bizarre that they would sell off their primary domain for their software to some shithawk SEO guy. What an incredible way to ruin your credibility with customers :\

Honestly it just looks like they're hoping to rake in some cash by dumping loads of traffic onto their SEO buddy, rather than maintaining their business credibility.

The company was founded by the same type of people, I'm not sure why it gets so much credibility as a took other than through great marketing. Nowadays there are much better tools to use (namely Snowplow, Segment)
It's probably not a security concern yet, but definitely take it as a sign that it's a disfunctional organization. Likewise, stop thinking of Kissmetrics/Space Pencil as a long term partner. The only other times I've seen something similar is when the domain was fairly valuable and was sold to an unrelated company (the lithium php framework selling lithium.com comes to mind)
Neil Patel was one of the founders of Kissmetrics, so at least it's not like they sold off the domain to some random person.