Based on our record, ICANN WHOIS seems to be a lot more popular than Expired Domains. While we know about 187 links to ICANN WHOIS, we've tracked only 14 mentions of Expired Domains. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
If you do a WHOIS lookup on the domain (usually at lookup.icann.org), then it should tell you the current registrant. There should be an email address or a way of contacting the current registrant. You may need to also go to the registrar where it's currently registered to contact them. But it's an ICANN requirement/rule that there MUST be a way to contact the current registrant through email or a form. Source: 11 months ago
Did you try doing a search on whois/lookup? Doing so, you will be able to see if your domain name is now handled by a different registrar. If that turns up no helpful results & the company you originally leased the domain name from was accredited by ICANN; it may be worthwhile to reach out on their support page. Source: 11 months ago
If you follow some of the whois information from https://lookup.icann.org/ for the domain the email is associated with (www.yourconcernedfriends.org) you can find an address in Reykjavik. Googling that address shows MULTIPLE lawsuits and warnings about various scams. Source: 12 months ago
It's probably a very new website, you can check the age using WHOIS info: https://lookup.icann.org/. Source: 12 months ago
In the future, you can use https://lookup.icann.org/ to check unfamiliar websites. If they're than a year old or registered for less than a year, those are red flags. Source: about 1 year ago
ExpiredDomains.net — this is probably the most well-known website in the domain industry and for good reason. You can see what domains have expired or will be expiring and can filter by things like search volume, TLDs registered, age, CPC, etc., and then hand register expired ones for cheap or place a backorder. I have a keyword list I’ve developed from analyzing dotDB and NameBio sales, so I will search for my... Source: 11 months ago
Hi all. I purchased an expired domain from expireddomains.net with a decent backlink profile and DR on Ahrefs. I analyzed the domain on Wayback and other sources to check if any of the backlinks or content was spammy in the past. It was not. Source: 11 months ago
I have been looking at buying expired domains off of expireddomains.net to up the company I work for's backlink profile. Source: about 1 year ago
Finding the Perfect Domain Name: The first step was to choose a suitable 5-letter domain name for my newsletter. ChatGPT pointed me towards http://expireddomains.net/, an excellent resource to find expired domain names. After some browsing, I finally found the perfect fit – a memorable, catchy name that truly represented the essence of my AI-focused newsletter. Source: about 1 year ago
You can find expired domains from expireddomains.net, spamzilla or domcop. But keep in mind that its not easy to find a good quality domain. Or you can hire someone from fiverr or blackhatworld to get the expired domain for you. Source: over 1 year ago
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