At first I was surprised that the traffic has tanked so much for sex.com, because I figured every teenager would enter it into the browser because it's so easy to think of. But when I went to Google (even with safe search off) and type "sex", all of the matches are for Sex and the City. My guess is that it's probably pretty hard to get much SEO traction for the word "sex".
I thought about it, but man, they were like a hundred dollars back then. And, if I recall correctly, you had to fax a signed contract back to Network Solutions to complete the registration
Personally if I where to purchase it, I would make it a high end lifestyle magazine. In between the old GQ, Bazaar and Robb Report. The branding for that is phenomenal. Not worth 13 mil though.
Insure.com – Sold for $16,000,000 in Oct 2009 to QuinStreet
Fund.com – $9,999,950 – Sold in 2008
Porn.com - Sold for $9,000,000 sometime in 2007
Business.com – Sold for $7,500,000 in 1999
Diamonds.com – Sold for $7,500,000
Beer.com - Sold for $7,000,000
Casino.com – $5,500,000 – Sold to a private company in 2003
Slots.com – $5,500,000 – Moniker auction May 2010
Toys.com $5.1M sold to Toys R Us
AsSeenOnTV.com – Sold for $5,100,000 in January of 2000
Are these solely for the domain name or was their a business sold behind the name. I would image that they are just the name. We exited Orlando.com for close to the top numbers, but it was an established business, even though HRN/Hotels.com dismantled the business and only used some of the technology and the name. So for them it was technically a name/tech purchase. We purchased the name only for 2 Mil in 99 or 2000 I can't remember exactly.
Does a domain name sale attach capital gains tax? because it really must be monstrous, if so. Can't imagine that many exemptions apply, and assuming the value at purchase was ~$10... or is it not that kind of asset?
Hostfiles are probably better in the long term than government control of DNS servers. Censorship at the DNS level is one of the low-hanging fruit of dictatorships.
I was watching some documentary on TV about an online porn company, and they were talking about several billion page views. It was one of the youtube knockoffs. All served up, for free. The guy said it was the best way to advertise and the site made money, i'm assuming through affiliate links. I've no idea how you serve up billions of page views (presumably with heavy photo/video content) and still make money. The conversion rates must be high.
The porn side of the internet is something people rarely talk about, but they must have some sharp developers working on some really tricky scaling problems.
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[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 69.1 ms ] threadsex sells.
C'mon, give us a decent sex site at least. Just sayin.
See more...updated May 14, 2010 http://www.fka200.com/2009/01/03/a-list-of-some-of-the-top-d...
The porn side of the internet is something people rarely talk about, but they must have some sharp developers working on some really tricky scaling problems.