• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

@BasilPuglisi

Content & Strategy, Powered by Factics & AI, Since 2009

  • Home
  • About Basil
  • Engagements & Moderating
  • AI – Artificial Intelligence
    • đź§­ AI for Professionals
  • Content Disclaimer
  • Blog #AIa
    • Business
    • Social Media
    • Expo Spotlight
  • AI Blog #AIg

domains

Understand the Basics of SEO: Why Geo and Subject Domain Names Rock!

January 5, 2012 by basilpuglisi@aol.com Leave a Comment

Search Engines are in the business of helping a user find the content they are looking for! If you keep this in mind you’ll start off with a great relationship with the Search Engines and the Visitors to your site.

Websites have three main areas you’ll want to really pay attention to:

  1. Structure
  2. Content
  3. References

[slideshare id=7181167&doc=seo101-110307150053-phpapp01]

As a website owner you’ll want this to be how you operate your lead generation through the search engines. Unless you’re an adult site, gambling or daily deal, people will not generally respond to a website about Plumbing when they were searching for Pizza.

Time and Money are important, you’ll get alot further if you concentrate your resources were they should be and where they will produce the highest rate of conversion. If you’re going to chase down multiple areas and categories do it in a way that provides unique, useful and provides a genuine experience for the user.

SEO Tip: Geo & Subject Domains > Brand Domains

An example of how this has been done is through domain masking and forwarding. Take the Domain PapaJohns.com, now that’s a great domain because people looking for “papa john’s” will find exactly what they are looking for, but will they still find it if they put in “MyTown Pizza” like “Brooklyn Pizza”, “Chicago Pizza”?

Here is an example of how we use forwarding on Digital Brand Marketing Education, the publically promoted domain is dbmei.com and that makes sense because it is short and simple. It makes for easy emails and sharing in social media without having to shorten the domain. However When you land on the site, you notice the actual domain changes to digitalbrandmarketing.com

Search Engines give a lot of value to domains, after all if you’re naming the site that, then those words must be relevant. In our case we want people looking for “Digital, Brand and/or Marketing”  to find our publication and those keywords fit perfectly with our content.

If you own Jerry’s Seafood.com, and your restaurant is in the town or geographic location of East Hampton, you might want to think about masking or forwarding the domain to easthamptonseafood.com or easthamptonseafoodrestaurant.com.

This is just one tip to help with your sites SEO, obviously you want the title tags, content, etc to all also fit this search term.

 

Sources:

  • Why Keyword Domains Are Better for SEO
  • Domain Names in Action
  • Keywords in the Domain Name

Filed Under: Blog, Business, Business Networking, General, Sales & eCommerce, SEO Search Engine Optimization Tagged With: domains, geo seo, local SEO, Search engine optimization, Search Engines, search leads, SEO, seo domains

ICANN: Domain Dispute?

May 21, 2011 by basilpuglisi@aol.com Leave a Comment

The Following Article was published in response to a issue raised in with two Real Estate brands in the Hamptons. It is issues like these that are at the heart of this publication and its mission. “It is my hope that when someone isn’t sure about digital media or the information that has been presented to them, they can turn to this blog as a source to verify or self educate so that they can make better more informed decisions”.

Saunders to Give Back Two Domain Names to Non-Saunders Agents published in 27East.com

ICANN – Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers

To reach another person or a company on the internet you have to type a name or a number as an address into your computer. This address has to be unique so computers can find each other. Who regulates it and decides on a uniform system? Who decides who owns what?

From the start there were a few known addresses called top level domain (TLD); .COM, .NET, .ORG, .EDU and endings which denote countries: .UK, .FR, .LI (Libya) or .IL (Israel).  These are called country code top level domains.

Up until September 1998, the United States Government completely controlled the system. The entity which supervised the internet was called IANA – Internet Assigned Numbers Authority.

As the internet grew and became more commercial and wide spread, the US control became increasingly untenable. The Clinton Administration was looking for a way to make the governance of the domain system global and free.  One option was to hand over control to the UN, and indeed the UN pushed to have that authority under its International Telecommunication’s Union, but the Clinton Administration decided to privatize the domain name governance. It did so to keep the web’s critical system away from political influence and stifling bureaucrats.

The ICANN – Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, a non-profit corporation was established. It was commissioned to oversee a number of internet related issues; managing the internet protocol address, assigning regional internet registries for countries, maintaining registries of internet protocol identifiers, management of top level domain names space and introduction of new generic top-level domains. Their principles call for helping preserve the operational stability of the internet, promote competition, and have a broad representation of the global internet community.

ICANN is located in Marina Del Ray, California, and remains in the same building where it started at the University of Southern California. Jon Postel who thought about an entity like that and was set to be the first CTO, died unexpectedly at the age of 55 before he saw it come to life.

At present ICANN is managed by a board of directors, composed of six representatives of sub groups that deal with specific section of the ICANN charter. They are supported by 3 organizations: the Generic Names Supporting Organization who deals with policy regarding generic top level domain, the County Code Names Support Organization and the Address Supporting Organization who deals with policy on IP addresses. There are advisory committees on different subjects like risk, finance, global relationships, IANA and structural improvements.

ICANN doesn’t control content and it can’t stop spam. It does not deal with access to the internet.

ICANN holds public meetings rotated between continents to encourage global participation in its processes. The resolutions, reports, and minutes of meetings are published on the ICANN website. In September 2006, ICANN signed a new agreement with the US Department of Justice for another 5 years.

Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy

One task the ICANN was asked to do is ownership dispute resolution for generic top level domains. Together with the World Intellectual Property Organization it drafted a policy that is known as Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy. This policy attempts to provide a mechanism for a fast, cheap and reasonable resolution of domain name conflicts, avoiding the traditional court system and relying on arbitration. According to their policy a domain registrant agrees, when he signs the domain contract, to be bound by the resolution of the arbitration.

The UDRP currently applies to .BIZ, .COM, .INFO, .NAME, .NET and .ORG and some country code top-level domains.

A complaint has to establish 3 elements:

  1. The domain name is confusingly similar or identical to a trademark or service mark in which the complainant has the right to.
  2. The registrant has no right or legitimate interest in the domain name.
  3. The registration was done in “bad faith”.

A single arbitrator or a panel of three arbitrators  will consider factors such as whether the domain was registered in order to be resold, rented or transferred to the owner of the trademark; whether the domain name was registered to prevent the owner from  registering corresponding domain name, whether it was registered primarily for the purpose of disrupting a competitor or whether, by using the domain name, the registrant attempted to attract internet users for commercial gain, creating a likelihood or confusion.

Those services come at a price; from $1,500 for a single arbitrator to $5,000 for a panel. A very long list of the disputes brought to them is published on their wesite.

Much of the published arbitration has to do with famous cases: Madonna v. Dan Parisi who registered the domains MadonnaCiccone.com and Madonna.com. He was ordered to turn over the domain names to Madonna.

Robert de Niro claimed ownership for all domain names that include the word Tribeca plus any content related to the film festival. His dispute was with a domain called Tribeca.net. Rihanna.com came up for sale and the legal team of the singer filed a UDRP. Other famous arbitrations were conducted regarding ElitrModels.com, WWF.com and AirDeccan.com. All the information about procedures and timelines can be found here: http://www.icann.org/en/udrp/udrp.htm

There are other entities approved by ICANN which provide UDRP services: World Intellectual Property Organization, National Arbitration Forum, Asian Domain Name Dispute Resolution Centre and the Czech Arbitration Court Arbitration Center for Internet Disputes.

All their sites detail the procedures, timelines and prices.

Sources:

  • 27East
  • ICANN
  • ICANN: UDRP
  • Time: Techland: ICANN vs the World
  • Wikipedia:ICANN
  • Wikipedia: Jon Postel
  • Wikipedia: Uniform Domain Name Resolution Policy
  • Wipo: Domains Guide

Filed Under: Blog, Branding & Marketing, Conferences & Education, Digital & Internet Marketing Tagged With: brand, business, Business Coach, domain dispute, domains, Hamptons, ICANN, internet marketing, small business, Visibility

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Ethics of Artificial Intelligence
  • Holiday Discovery, AI Acceleration, and Search Precision
  • LinkedIn Sponsored Articles, Adobe Premiere Pro AI Speech Enhancement, and the Google Core Update
  • TikTok Search, Canva Video AI, and HubSpot Marketplace: Converting Discovery Into Scalable Action
  • YouTube AI Auto-Chapters, Salesforce Einstein 1, and Google Spam Policies: Aligning Attention, Personalization, and Trust

#AIgenerated

Bing Evolves: Visual Answers, Image Generation, and Persistent AI Chat #AIg

Beyond Products: Google’s April Reviews Update and BrightonSEO’s AI Focus #AIg

Google’s March Core Update, Baidu Ernie Bot Launch, and Bard Public Rollout #AIg

From DuckAssist to GPT-4: The March Leap Forward in AI Search #AIg

Google’s February Product Reviews Update, Brave Summarizer, and Pubcon’s AI-SEO Focus #AIg

AI Arms Race in Search: Google Bard, AI-Powered Bing, and Baidu’s Ernie Bot Plans #AIg

AI in Search: NeevaAI’s Conversational Leap and Yandex’s Code Leak Shake Industry Insights #AIg

AI Search Engines Emerge with YouChat and Perplexity #AIg

Year in Review: Search Engines in the AI Era #AIgenerated

Communities Beyond Algorithms #AIgenerated

Google’s October Spam Update and the Fight Against Low-Quality AI Content #AIgenerated

Holiday Ads Go Short-Form and UGC-Driven #AIgenerated

More Posts from this Category

@BasilPuglisi Copyright 2008, Factics™ BasilPuglisi.com, Content & Strategy, Powered by Factics & AI,