“Lowest Price Guaranteed!” $48 .com registrar canned
ICANN has terminated its second registrar of the week, ending the accreditation of Hong Kong-based 0101 Internet for non-payment of fees and other infractions.
The registrar, not to be confused with the unrelated 101 Domain, will lose its ability to sell gTLD domains January 29, according to a public ICANN termination notice.
The company’s roughly 1,200 gTLD domains will be transferred to another registrar, a procedure complicated by the fact that ICANN also alleges that 0101 Internet has not been escrowing its customers’ registration data as required.
The Compliance notice spells out a timeline of alleged non-responsiveness to ICANN’s emails, phone calls, mail and faxes dating back to March 2003, almost three years ago.
0101 Internet’s web page proudly declares “Lowest Price Guaranteed!”, with .com, .net and .org priced at a measly $47.88 each, which might explain why the company’s DUM has been tumbling for over a decade.
No RDAP? No accreditation
ICANN has terminated its contract with another registrar after the company failed to implement RDAP, the Whois replacement protocol.
US-based Brennercom will be de-accredited January 28, according to a published ICANN Compliance notice.
The headline infraction is the fact that Brennercom failed to migrate to RDAP, but as is often the case the registrar owes ICANN money and has failed to publish some administrative details on its web site.
ICANN will now move Brennercom’s registered domains to a different registrar under its usual transition process.
That shouldn’t take long. While Brennercom’s web site claims to have handled customers with thousands of domains in their portfolios, my records show it has never had more than 133 domains under management. Right now, it has about 40.
Half of registrar’s domains are abusive, ICANN says
A fast-growing registrar seems to be experiencing its growth spurt due to extremely high levels of DNS abuse, including phishing, according to the latest public breach notice from ICANN Compliance.
More than half of Bulgarian registrar MainReg’s domains under management are abusive, judging by the notice, which alleges MainReg’s unwillingness to investigate abuse reports in violation of its accreditation contract.
The notice is the first I can recall seeing that cites data from Domain Metrica, an ICANN service that aggregates abuse data from third-party block-lists. An unspecified third-party reporter (hands up in the comments if it was you!) is also cited.
“ICANN Domain Metrica data indicates that in November 2025 approximately 48% of MainReg’s DUMs were reported for phishing, with the figure at 45% as of 5 January 2026,” the notice says.
“The complaining party stated that its own independent analysis identified an even higher proportion of the Registrar’s DUMs engaged in scam‑related activity,” it adds.
MainReg isn’t a huge registrar, but transaction reports show that its DUM tripled between September 2024 and September 2025, from about 10,000 names to about 30,000. The company registered its first name in 2015. Almost all of its names are in .com, .net and .org.
The notice alleges other breaches, such as failing to migrate from Whois to RDAP, and gives MainReg until January 28 to come in compliance or risk termination.
Noss to leave Tucows corner office
Tucows CEO Elliot Noss has stepped down after over a quarter century in the role.
He will be replaced by David Woroch, currently CEO of the Tucows Domains business, reflecting the company’s newly revealed plan to sell off its Ting ISP business.
Noss will continue as a consultant for Ting as it seeks a buyer, though the company revealed it will quite possibly sell the unit at a loss.
He has been leading Tucows since its early days as a free software download site to becoming an ICANN-accredited registrar in the first wave in the late 1999.
“We created wholesale domain registration out of whole cloth which fundamentally changed the way domain names were distributed,” Noss told analysts last week.
Woroch will continue to run the domains business. Ivan Ivanov, CFO, will also be CEO of Ting.
GoDaddy launches “ultra-premium” domain marketplace
If you’re going to launch a marketplace for “ultra-premium” domain names, you couldn’t pick a better domain to launch it on than DomainNames.com, and that’s what GoDaddy has done.
Via its Afternic secondary market business, the site was officially announced today. GoDaddy is reaching out to investors who own a “category-defining .com, a rare two-letter gem, a single-word .com or .ai, or a numeric masterpiece”.
While the company says it’s invitation-only, it it’s also asking investors to submit their names for consideration via a form on the new site, so that’s probably only half-accurate.
It’s looking for names it reckons could fetch six-figure asking prices and above.
If you want to know what GoDaddy thinks is “ultra-premium”, consider that the 110 domain names listed at launch are almost exclusively one–English-word or two-character .com names, with a handful of one-word .ai domains thrown in.
Domains will be actively marketed by the service and sellers have to sign an exclusivity agreement with GoDaddy.
That said, the domains don’t seem to have custom landers. Visitors to the listed names are greeted with a variety of Afternic/GoDaddy parking pages, some of which even have buy-it-now prices listed.
Decades-old US registrar gets a spanking
ICANN Compliance has filed a wide-ranging breach notice against an American registrar that’s been accredited for over 20 years.
Cincinnati-based Netdorm, which does business as DnsExit.com, has been handed a long list of alleged contract violations and an October 16 deadline to fix things or risk termination.
As we’ve seen regularly recently, the registrar’s apparent failures to carry out the technical migrations from Whois to RDAP and from NCC Group to DENIC for escrow services are the biggest of ICANN’s concerns.
Netdorm is also past-due on its fees and has a long checklist of administrative and transparency failures, according to the Compliance breach notice.
Despite being accredited since 2004, the company has been chugging along with fewer than 6,000 gTLD domains under management for many years. It gives away third-level subdomains for free and claims to run over a million of them.
Com Laude buys larger rival Markmonitor
Consolidation in the corporate registrar market continued this week, with Com Laude announcing that it is buying longstanding rival Markmonitor for an undisclosed sum.
Markmonitor is being spun out of Newfold Digital, which acquired it for $302.5 million three years ago, with Newfold saying it wanted to “simplify its portfolio” and focus on Network Solutions and Bluehost.
Both companies compete in the brand protection and corporate domain management space, managing domain portfolios and dot-brand gTLDs on behalf of high-value clients.
Markmonitor is the larger registrar by far in terms of gTLD domains under management, with over a million domains at the last count. Com Laude has about a quarter of that number on its accreditation.
Ben Crawford will remain CEO of Com Laude and Stu Homan will remain head of Markmonitor. The company will maintain its offices in Idaho, London, and Tokyo.
Just last week Com Laude said it was acquiring rival new gTLD consultant Fairwinds Partners. Expect to see Com Laude’s fingerprints on a lot of new gTLD applications next year.
Epik took down Charlie Kirk doxing site
Epik confirmed that it took down a web site dedicated to doxing people who celebrated the murder of right-wing American podcaster Charlie Kirk.
Epik said it had “removed” the Charlie Kirk Data Foundation — originally titled Expose Charlie’s Murderers — from its platform.
The company said it “will not provide services to anyone who generates credible security threats”.
While the site — originally at charliesmurderers.com before switching to ckdf.org — hosted an unmoderated database of personal information on tens of thousands of people who had allegedly celebrated Kirk’s murder online, Epik seems to have removed it on more technical grounds.
The registrar said the original domain was registered “using false information” in violation of its terms, and that there were “verifiable DDoS (distributed denial-of-service) threats” connected to the site.
Both domains in question are now at Namecheap, though neither resolve to a web site at time of publication and the group’s social media accounts appears to have been dormant for a few days.
Epik was once known as a safe haven for right-wing extremism but has since said it’s turned over a new leaf.
Another registrar goes AWOL
ICANN has started takedown procedures against another registrar that appears to have disappeared from the face of the Earth.
The registrar is 0101 Internet, based in Hong Kong, not to be confused with 101 Domain, which is based in Ireland and California and a completely different company.
0101 has been around for 15 years and had a little over 1,000 domains under management at the last count, mostly .com. Its DUM peaked at over 10,000 over a decade ago but has been declining since.
Currently, its web site doesn’t reliably resolve, which may be the reason ICANN can’t find contractually required information there. Archives show the place on its site where you would usually expect to see a company name or logo, it has just said “Your Brand” for the last few years.
The main problem outlined in ICANN Compliance’s breach notice is that 0101 has not been escrowing its registrant data with DENIC, which could cause problems when its customers’ domains are migrated to a new registrar.
It also hasn’t been paying its ICANN fees, according to the notice.
0101 has until October 3 to come into compliance or risk losing its contract.
gTLD loses its second-largest registrar after breach
ICANN has terminated another registrar’s accreditation, this time putting about 10,000 domains at risk.
The registrar in question is Dubai-based Intracom Middle East, which does business at domains.gdn.
As the domain suggests, the company specialized in .gdn domain names. It had about 10,000 of them under management at the last count, sold for under a dollar each for the first year.
It was the .gdn registry’s second-biggest registrar after Dynadot.
ICANN Compliance is terminating its contract for not paying its fees, not implementing RDAP, and generally not publishing required transparency information on its web site.
As I noted in May, its web site appeared to be down, and archived versions of the site suggested it had been hacked at least once recently.
ICANN, which had been chasing Intracom for a little over a year, said it will follow the De-Accredited Registrar Transition Procedure to move the company’s remaining domain names to a new registrar.







Recent Comments