I understand what you say, i just say that having a name with "bay" or "ABCebay" doesn't make the name stand out, brandable or worth more than eshore, emarket or many others.
You are correct with this statement.
But there are many who have this notion that if it is good for one then it is good for all.
Currently there are more than 34,000 variations of words that have the letters eBay.
http://domain-search.domaintools.com/?q=ebay.com&de_search=Search&filter=y&bh=A&pool=C&bc=25
Some of those combos have more than one extension regged.
Having the same name or parts of a name and regging that part is no guarantee of success.
But when you get involved with these notoriously protective brands like Google, eBay, Yahoo, IBM, Microsoft - sometime all someone ends up getting are nasty letters.
Even if the site were to be a success, all those customers and traffic and sales can suddenly disappear when the registrar shuts the site down due to complaints or cooperation with the legal departments.
I understand the posts made after my last post but I still have a couple questions:
- I bought DivorceBay after it dropped, however someone held on to it for 5 years. So in that time, did one person own it or several? I understand if you buy a name in an auction the name continues to add years of ownership to the new owner. So with DivorceBay, did one person own it and then get a C&D letter and then end up selling it and someone else picked it up and this process went on for 5 years? Or did one person own it and in some mysterious way never received a C&D letter in over 5 years?
- What should I do with the domain? Should I just park it and put divorce ads on it or try to develop it or flip it?
The best thing would be to review all these posts and apply all the answers to your situation, domain, best usage, and cautionary statements.
Seriously, and no offense, there is no point in breaking down each domain in a case by case matter when the answers will not change.
Primarily consider one issue no matter what you do -
do so at your own risk.
The answer is simple in condensed form ad nauseam:
Not only is it simple, it is the same.