| What is Domaining versus cybersquatting? |
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Although the general public may compare domainers to cybersquatters, the official term cybersquatting only applies to trademark infringement. Legal domainers avoid domain names that infringe on intellectual property and they avoid typosquatting domain names that are similar to intellectual property. Those who are not domainers may compare them to ticket scalpers, but domainers compare themselves to real estate developers selling Internet real estate. Generally, buying up mass amounts of domains is done when they are cheap to buy whereas the second level domains of .ki cost over a thousand dollars and so these domains are rarely snatched up in mass in hopes to resell to someone. CNET has reported that "Today, cybersquatters have rebranded themselves as "domainers." While an illegal cybersquatter will register names of intellectual property, a domainer will do other things such as automated domain sniping of expired domains, registration of known words, and registering of all domains that are short such as up to four letters.
Some registrars have been accused of domain tasting abuseĀ where once someone searches for a domain's availability in a registrar, if they do not register it right away, the domain is lost and registered by a domainer. While such an action may appear that the registrars are secretly funneling all the names looked up to domainers, this may purely be a domainer's automated system of registering domains that were registered previously and not collusion between a registrar and a domainer and thus only the registrar was involved in domain name front running and not the domainers who bought such domains. Source: Domaining - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |