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Friday, November 25, 2011

MAX Surf - where small is BIG

MAX Surf - where small is BIG: "
We are an online advertising website portal and a provider of ad serving solutions for other companies engaged in traffic management and sales. We have the ability to help you generate revenue from your website. If you are looking to maximize your traffic with explosive results you have come to the right place. Our goal is for YOU to make money.

Cashout rules (1% Fee):
50% reupgrade - If cashout amount being requested and active ad-packs purchased by members less or equals to 50% of maxlimits allowed.
75% reupgrade - If cashout amount being requested or active ad-packs purchased by members greater than 50% of maxlimits allowed."

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hyipsupervisor.com - The Best HYIP Monitor :: Home

hyipsupervisor.com - The Best HYIP Monitor :: Home: "best hyip monitoring system to provide you the fastest and the most reliable information about high yield investments programs. We do not endorse or own any of listed programs. Before investing, you should thoroughly study and understand the information provided by programs owner"

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Right Brain Domaining

Right Brain Domaining: "Without meaning our domain names would be worthless strings of characters. What exactly are you selling? A domain name should not simply be some keywords or a brand, but rather an experience, a vision or calling for someone to develop their own web presence. Take some time to discover meaning in your portfolio or before registering your next domain."

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

10 things you MUST know before you register a domain name with anyone

10 things you MUST know before you register a domain name with anyone: " "Pay-as-you-go":
This is where you make a multi-year interest-free loan to the registrar. It works like this: You register a domain with them for example, 5 years (perhaps to obtain a discounted rate), you expect your domain name to be registered for 5 years. Think again, some registrars will pay the registry for 1 year and pocket the rest of your money.
Then for the rest of your five year term they'll renew each year for one year. Usually this is coupled with a strict "no-refunds" policy, so an odd situation occurs: they stand to make more money from your original registration if they lose you as a customer before your full 5 years are up, so providing poor service to the point where you leave actually adds to their bottom line. "

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How to Find Out If a Domain Name Is Available | Media & Telecommunications > Internet & WWW from AllBusiness.com

How to Find Out If a Domain Name Is Available | Media & Telecommunications > Internet & WWW from AllBusiness.com: "uthorized domain name registrars allow the public to conduct free domain name searches. In most cases, all you have to do is enter the domain name you want into a form on the registrar's Web page — if the name is taken, the form will list the current owner's name and contact information. (If this is the case, be sure to read How to Buy a Domain Name Owned by Someone Else.) If the name is still available, you can fill out another online form to register the name yourself.

Other Web sites, including many Internet service providers and Web hosting services, also provide links to this domain name database."

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TradeDomains.org - Domain Name Tasting

TradeDomains.org - Domain Name Tasting: "According to ICANN, domain tasting is “a monetisation practice employed by registrants to use the AGP to register domain names in order to test their profitability. During this period, registrants conduct a cost-benefit analysis to see if the tested domain names return enough traffic to offset the registration fee paid to the registry over the registration period.”

In short, with domain tasting you can register a domain name, after it expired, and over a period of 5 days test its profitability. If the domain name is profitable in terms of traffic and income, you can keep the domain. If not, you can simply cancel the registration and receive a refund on the registration fee, minus a small service fee recently implemented."

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dns - How do I check that a domain is available without triggering a grabber? - Pro Webmasters - Stack Exchange

dns - How do I check that a domain is available without triggering a grabber? - Pro Webmasters - Stack Exchange: "
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down vote
I never use a web browser address bar to check if a domain exists.

I use a registrar or a domain search engine like http://www.checkdomain.com or http://www.netsol.com to see if they are available.

linkimprove this answer
answered Feb 1 at 4:28

Randolph West
1412
And those services aren't run by squatters? ;-) – Aaron Digulla Feb 1 at 4:42
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@Aaron, indeed. Read this: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_name_front_running – Dour High Arch Feb 1 at 5:33"

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dns - How do I check that a domain is available without triggering a grabber? - Pro Webmasters - Stack Exchange

dns - How do I check that a domain is available without triggering a grabber? - Pro Webmasters - Stack Exchange: "The company has several days to decide if they want to keep the domain; if not they can abandon it at no charge. According to the Wikipedia article, over 90% of domain name registrations at some registrars are "tastes". – Dour High Arch Feb 1 at 5:31
@Dour: How do I avoid name tasting? – Aaron Digulla Feb 4 at 3:19"

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dns - How do I check that a domain is available without triggering a grabber? - Pro Webmasters - Stack Exchange

dns - How do I check that a domain is available without triggering a grabber? - Pro Webmasters - Stack Exchange: " Just curious, the same thing happened to me before. – Keith Feb 1 at 4:47
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For my own learning, how could a domain grabber know you typed in a domain in your browser that wasn't registered and then grab it? How would you know this had happened, and wasn't just a coincidence. – Matthew Lock Feb 1 at 5:00
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@Matthew, it's not a coincidence. It's called "domain name tasting"; en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_tasting. Companies form agreements with registrars to automatically register any domain accessed that is not already registered."

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dns - How do I check that a domain is available without triggering a grabber? - Pro Webmasters - Stack Exchange

dns - How do I check that a domain is available without triggering a grabber? - Pro Webmasters - Stack Exchange: "
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A few days ago, I checked whether a domain was available by tying the name in the web browser. Also host returned not found 3(NXDOMAIN)

When I tried again today, some domain grabber had snatched it.

How can I check whether a domain is available without losing to some barely legal "service"?

dns domains domain-grabbing
linkimprove this question
asked Feb 1 at 4:25

Aaron Digulla
1444
What registrar was it registered with? Just curious, the same thing happened to me before. – Keith Feb 1 at 4:47
2
For my own learning, how could a domain grabber know you typed in a domain in your browser that wasn't registered and then grab it? How would you know this had happened, and wasn't just a coincidence. – Matthew Lock Feb 1 at 5:00"

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