G'day Ian, > So you can 'resell' these to someone else who's not eligible I guess? No I'm not interested in selling the domains because I don't think .au domain sales can be advertised can they? Like you can sell a domain under that new transfer policy but there is still a rule saying you just can't advertise it as for sale. Is that how it works? If so it is pretty stupid because the only way you can sell it and recycle it back into the domain system is by waiting for someone who wants a domain to contact you with an offer so you'll never be able to get the true value of the domain if you can not advertise it as for sale and not place it through a open domain marketplace like Sedo or Afternic or eBay so is better to just register it and earn money through advertising. I just want to register some domains so I get high rankings in Google and Yahoo because it just seems that search engines really like .org.au domains so I can get decent traffic then put some advertisements on them like everyone else is doing. I'm only new to all of this (domains, seo, monetization) so can look at it objectively and I don't see anything wrong with it. Everything I've read says domain parking is legitimate business and domaining is HUGE overseas. Look at the message boards like http://www.dnforum.com and http://www.namepros.com Australia is years behind the rest of the world in this area. Australia is like it is a different universe when it come to all of this. > You may get some offers off-list, but you might have to wait till the > slather has completely finished being opened, sometime later this year > if the recommendations of the latest panel are to be fully enacted. You're right I've received information directly about how I can move around the rules. Will be good when it is a completely open system like you say will happen. Is there an ETA on when later this year it will occur? > Could you provide us with one or two examples? I've seen these ones at the top of Google for their search terms and they all seem to be part of the same network. fashion.org.au onlinegames.org.au food.org.au celebrity.org.au computer.org.au This domain livingroom.org.au looks like it is registered to a church it every time I do a search for stuff like SEO or Photos it comes up on the #1 page with Google with made for Adsense sites on that domain by that guy here in Australia that makes $300,000+ a year by pay per click advertising which I guess is through sites like this http://www.livingroom.org.au/photolog/ http://www.livingroom.org.au/searchengineoptimization/ There is a heap more I've seen but you only asked for a couple. Cheers. Luke On Jan 13, 2008 5:11 PM, Ian Smith <smithi§nimnet.asn.au> wrote: > > On Sun, 13 Jan 2008, Luke Corazza wrote: > > > Hello Aussie Domainers List, > > Yes, that's pretty much right these days. Even has a newsletter that's > been successfully pushing such further 'mercanisation for a while now. > > > > I've been trying to register some .org.au domains for domain name > > parking monetization but have been getting knocked back by > > registrars. I know there are rules that say you need to be a > > government/tax department authorised not-for-profit organisation or > > charity to get a .org.au but I was wanting to know which registrars > > allow you to buy .org.au domain names without actually being a > > authorised non-profit? > > Right, so you want to know which registrars will admit to breaching AuDA > policies to 'sell' you a mob of domains for which you are not eligible? > So you can 'resell' these to someone else who's not eligible I guess? > > You may get some offers off-list, but you might have to wait till the > slather has completely finished being opened, sometime later this year > if the recommendations of the latest panel are to be fully enacted. > > > > I've been seeing heaps of .org.au domains that seem like commercial > > sites and parking pages > > Could you provide us with one or two examples? > > > > so want know who I should go to to get some sweet domains while > > they are still left. > > For now it'll just have to be done under the counter (nudge, wink) but > some say that's no impediment .. in fact past breaches of policies has > been advanced as a primary reason that all rules should be abandoned, so > you're definitely on the winning side .. > > > Thanks. Luke > > Ian > >Received on Mon Jan 14 2008 - 00:06:25 UTC
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