Recent Posts
- After 10 months, ICANN board “promptly” publishes its own minutes
- China yanks Daily Stormer domain after Buffalo mass shooting
- Fewer domain companies closing down than expected
- ICANN highlights “not getting things done” risk
- Another single-TLD brand protection service planned
- Dot Hip Hop slashes prices 80% in relaunch
- Three gTLDs to lose Donuts trademark protection
- Tucows to reanimate Tucows brand as sales flatten
- Blockchain domains pose “significant risks” to internet, says ICANN
- Russian registry hit with second breach notice after downtime
- Two countries could lose registrar competition after breach notices
- .tattoo — another UNR gTLD auction winner emerges
- Neustar now linked to scandal in the Catholic church
- SSAD: Whois privacy-busting white elephant to be shelved
- ICANN reports shocking increase in pandemic scams
- Kaufmann selected for ICANN board
- Secondary market fluffs GoDaddy amid slowdown concerns
- Washington DC picked for ICANN 77
- UDRP suspended in Ukraine
- Gee, thanks. auDA cuts price of .au names by five cents
- ICANN salary porn: 2021 edition
- A sign of things to come? Verisign slashes outlook in post-pandemic slowdown
- UDRP comments reveal shocking lack of trust in ICANN process
- CentralNic sees 51% growth in Q1
- Ukraine won’t delete domains until war is over
- Covid surge scuppers ICANN LA meetings
- Vox Pop defends its favorite cybersquatter
- ICANN picks recipient of $1 million Ukraine aid
- More friction over closed generics
- ICANN’s Covid-19 waiver formally appealed
- GoDaddy and XYZ sign away rights after UNR’s crypto gambit
- Verisign wipes free TLDs from the world stats
- ICANN picks 28 registries for abuse audit
- TMCH turning off some brand-blocking services
- Bye-bye Alice’s Registry
- .kids goes live, plans to launch this year
- ICANN suggests its Covid waiver may be worthless
- Domain sales exempt from US sanctions on Russia
- African Union can’t register .africa domain
- Microsoft seizes domains Russia was using to attack Ukraine
- Blacknight objects to ICANN 74 Covid waiver
- DNS Abuse Institute names free tool NetBeacon, promises launch soon
- Radix renewals drive growth as revenue hits $38 million
- GoDaddy formally signs .tv registry contract
- ICANN lists the reasons I probably won’t be going to ICANN 74
- A public apology for my April Fool’s blog post
- ICANN accidentally summons Lesser Old One in DNSSEC snafu
- ICANN “volunteers” want to get paid for sitting through pandemic Zoom calls
- War fails to stop .ua domains selling
- Marby pledges low red tape in $1 million Ukraine donation
- 2LDs boost .au’s growth
- With mystery auction winner, .sexy prices go from $25 to $2,500
- Ukraine registry hit by 57 attacks in a week
- ICANN says higher domain prices may be in the public interest
- .org price caps: ICANN chair denies “secret” meetings
- Nigeria slashes prices to compete with .com
- .au names available today
- GoDaddy acquires DNAcademy
- Google to launch a shopping-themed gTLD next week
- Another DNSSEC screw-up takes down thousands of .au domains
- XYZ bought most of Uniregistry’s TLDs
- What to make of this strange trend in new domain regs?
- EURid appoints new CEO
- Mutually assured destruction? Now Afilias faces .web disqualification probe
- Closed generic gTLDs likely to be allowed, as governments clash with ICANN
- 101domain throttles its business in Russia
- ICANN bigwigs support sanctions on Russian domains
- Soviet Union “no longer considered eligible for a ccTLD”, ICANN chair confirms
- Nominet cuts off Russian registrars
- Now Sedo pulls the plug on Russians
- DNSSEC claims another victim as entire TLD disappears
- Ukraine’s emotional plea to ICANN 73
- ICANN extends Covid-19 abuse monitoring to Ukraine war
- ICANN’s Ukraine relief may extend to Russians too
- ICANN offers $1 million to Ukraine projects, supports Ukrainian registrants
- Here’s a way ICANN could actually help the people of Ukraine
- GoDaddy stops selling .ru domains, commits money to support Ukraine
- Gandi says it supports Ukraine but WON’T cut off Russians
- Now IONOS kicks out Russian customers
- ICANN says NO to Ukraine’s Big Ask
- Namecheap offers free services to Russian dissidents
- CENTR kicks out Russia
- Ukraine asks ICANN to turn off Russia’s internet, but it’s a bad idea
- Namecheap boss goes nuclear on Russian customers
- Noss pressures bankers, lawyers over Russian oligarch links
- As Russia advances on Kyiv, .ua moves out-of-country
- Maybe now’s the time for ICANN to start dismantling the Soviet Union
- Cybersquatting cases down in .uk
- GoDaddy among five companies competing for .za contract
- Registrar hit with second porn UDRP breach notice this year
- Costa Rica’s only registrar gets terminated
- GoDaddy Registry to raise some TLD prices, lower others
- Supreme Court allows fight for .nu to proceed
- Liberties group appeals NIXI’s “two domains rule” brush-off
- ICANN stuck between Ukraine and Russia in time zone debate
- Greek .eu domains to be deleted
- UDRP cases soar at WIPO in 2021
- CentralNic buys a gTLD and a search engine for peanuts
- “It’s not our fault!” — ICANN blames community for widespread delays
- PIR to offer industry FREE domain abuse clearinghouse
- GoDaddy now making over $1 billion a quarter
- Post-lockdown blues hit Tucows’ growth
- Surprising nobody, Verisign to raise .com prices again
- Verisign and PIR join new DNS abuse group
- auDA ramps up marketing for direct .au launch
- Thousands of domains hit by downtime after DNSSEC error
- Is the .sucks mass-cybersquatting experiment over?
- At ICANN, you can have any registrar you want, as long as it begins with A
- .eu grows in Q4 after silly growth in Portugal
- Turkish registrar on the naughty step over abuse
- Court denies .sucks trademark bid
- ICANN hasn’t implemented a policy since 2016
- Satirists register Joe Rogan domain to promote Covid vaccines
- Do young people know how to use domain names?
- “GDPR is not my fault!” — ICANN fears reputational damage from Whois reform
- Cahn says .hiphop premiums could show up at auction next month
- No SSAD before 2028? ICANN publishes its brutal review of Whois policy
- ICANN board not happy with $100 million Whois reform proposals
- Over 6,000 Brexit domains snapped up after mass delete
- Verisign saw MASSIVE query spike during Facebook outage
- .xxx shows up in botnet top-five TLDs for the first time
- ICANN splits $9 million new gTLD ODP into nine tracks
- “We fell short” — Tucows says sorry for Enom downtime
- Crain named ICANN CTO
- Bank spends $800,000 to move from a .bank to the exact-match .com
Register.com sold at a $65 million loss
Register.com has been acquired by web hosting company Web.com for $135 million, substantially less than the $200 million Vector Capital paid for it five years ago.
Web.com said the acquisition will help it access new small business customers for lead generation, to cross-sell its existing products.
The company’s customer base will increase by over 400% to more than one million customers, Web.com said. The combined firm will have annual revenue of $180 million.
Register.com was one of the first five ICANN-accredited registrars. It failed as a public company, and after years of financial wrangling was finally taken private by Vector in 2005.
Vector specializes in buying up troubled companies and turning them around, but it doesn’t appear to have increased the value of this particular asset over the last five years.
Related posts (automatically generated):
Together at last: NetSol merges with Register.com
Register.com hit by breach notice over 62,232 domains
Tagged: ICANN, register.com, vector capital, web.com
If one assumes the DNS market remains static with
the 1998 Registrar-Registry Model.
If one assumes that the “License to Print Money” for
TLD Registries remains.
If one assumes that .WEB is viewed as a “Premium TLD”.
If the new DNS (SCUBA) Software continues to gain
market share, with WEB.COM used as the “Root
of .WEB”.
One would expect .WEB to “make it” given the
sheer size and financial power of the 2010 players.
Comparing that to 1998 and the .WEB efforts
is remarkably different.
Could ICANN stop .WEB if they wanted to ?
That’s quite enough bullshit for one day Jim.
[…] Register.com sold at a $65 million loss […]
[…] Register.com sold at a $65 million loss […]
[…] Register.com sold at a $65 million loss […]
[…] Register.com sold at a $65 million loss […]
Register.com began as a great idea. As usual, a series of investors destroyed a great idea – and now web.com is nailing the final nail in it’s coffin. Once a loyal customer, I am scouring Romania. I can be ripped off for less.