@DomainCX@atomHQ Yeah, I would probably give it a proper shot if it wasn't so complex.
At this point, @afternic works fine.
It's basic. It yields sales.
You don't need an overly complex system to make sales.
https://t.co/ErPrE5jCrr has quite a steep learning curve.
Different listing tiers, commission tiers, coins, AI tokens, points, etc. The processes are quite confusing.
I just want access to the wholesale marketplace (as a buyer), but it is probably not worth the hassle. @atomHQ
As a domain investor, the lower tier the domain extension is the more premium the term needs to be.
Average term + .COM = Decent chance to sell.
Great term + average extension = Decent chance to sell.
Average term + average extension = Unlikely to sell.
@katerleonid One price is wholesale. One is retail.
The sell-through rate with domains is low, so you need massive margins on the domains you sell to cover all the ones you don't sell.
https://t.co/Apz2X1bFwM is starting to gain some traction now after being launched in mid March.
The sales are increasing month over month.
March - 9
April - 37
May - 106
36 sales in the last week.
There are always multiple sales daily in the "Recently sold" section.
Interesting idea.
All domains are $99. Seller keeps $90.
I bought a couple domains.
There have already been 50+ sales in a short period of time, so there is some proof of concept.
25 free listings.
It's worth checking out.
https://t.co/Apz2X1bFwM
I have bought (6) domains so far, all in .COM.
CodeLeaders
TrademarkLabs
VCPlanet
CentralLeads
RoomPros
CompareContracts
For $99 you are not going to get amazing domains, but you can still find decent combos.
I think in total around (135) domains have sold.
Interesting idea.
All domains are $99. Seller keeps $90.
I bought a couple domains.
There have already been 50+ sales in a short period of time, so there is some proof of concept.
25 free listings.
It's worth checking out.
https://t.co/Apz2X1bFwM
What's annoys me the most about "AI" at this point is turning something basic into something tedious with an overuse of buzzwords and startup lingo.
The low effort required to generate and post this slop only makes it that much worse.
I asked @ChatGPTapp to compare two lists of domains.
51 and 50 domains, to see which domain was present on one list and not the other.
The AI incorrectly told me they were identical.
Then, after I correctly pointed out which domain it was, it tried to gaslight me.
Only on the third time, did it admit the mistake.
I am starting to become a luddite when it comes to a lot of this "AI" nonsense.
It's a great buzz word, but in reality it is leading to the enshittification of a lot of things.
There is just so much low effort, low quality slop everywhere.
I am starting to become a luddite when it comes to a lot of this "AI" nonsense.
It's a great buzz word, but in reality it is leading to the enshittification of a lot of things.
There is just so much low effort, low quality slop everywhere.
@ContactOwner Yeah, but it's a reality check.
I have bought (5) domains on there, out of thousands listed.
I think 100+ have sold in total.
Most domains are terrible. That is why they don't sell. 😀
Interesting idea.
All domains are $99. Seller keeps $90.
I bought a couple domains.
There have already been 50+ sales in a short period of time, so there is some proof of concept.
25 free listings.
It's worth checking out.
https://t.co/Apz2X1bFwM
I guess technically these are "no-reserve" auctions.
However, the opening bids are from thousands to tens of thousands of dollars.
I see opening bids of $88K, $85K, $75K, $50K, etc.
Even random https://t.co/NgPDqc7vda have opening bids of $2K to $2,500.
📅 Mark your calendar.
GoDaddy's Premium Auction Event returns June 3.
2,600+ no-reserve domains, headlined by:
👉Unemployment․com
👉DUIAttorney․com
👉Bracelet․com
Closes June 9-10
Download the full list! https://t.co/a6NBXDoEV4
@Aladey I bought it.
Solid domain. Fair wholesale price.
It was my first time using @spaceship as a buyer.
It was a bit of a pain as I was getting a "validation error" when checking out.
The issue was specific to the .US registry, but chat was able to resolve it.
I love selling domains but sellers let’s understand something. Outbound only works when your domain has a clear path of potential buyers.
If the name obviously belongs to fintech, dental, logistics, whatever, we know exactly who to call and how to frame the value.
A random misspelled word with no obvious meaning or buyer, there’s nobody to pitch. Clients looking for specific domains of course but that’s not the outbound brokers do.
Not every name is outbound material.
Green[.]com domain name changed hands for $7.5 million
https://t.co/ktFChhJe3x
First reported by George Kirikos @GeorgeKirikos on May 9, 2026 on my FreeSpeech[.]com blog.
If you see it elsewhere, it's probably a parasitic copycat blogger looking for attention.
The toughest type of domains to evaluate are "decent" ones.
Great domains and bad domains are normally pretty obvious.
The "decent" domains make up a large amount of end user sales, especially in the X,XXX range.
A good eye for domains comes with experience.