I’m trying to sell a domain name on ebay and I can’t find the option to specify a reserve price. There is no way I’m putting it up for auction without a reserve price. I’m a new ebay seller if that makes a difference..I just don’t get why it’s not asking me if I want a reserve or not . Can anyone help?
I want to advertise my domain, reviewed.tv, on EBay … as I already have it advertised on Sedo. Yet, I cannot do so without a protective reserve price because the name would go for too little – and far less than its appraised value. With reserve prices for normal items costing 2% (up to max of £100 GBP, around $200 USD), it is going to cost me over £100 to list the item. Are there no special reserve rates for domain names as there are for cars and houses?
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There is a domain name that I want which I am sure has been left to expire. so is currently PENDING DELETE in the whois status. I want to ensure i am the first to buy it when it becomes available, can i reserve it with a company to ensure they buy it the second it becomes available before some automated annoying domain bot search snaps it up for easy profit?
September 24, 2008
Speaker: Ilhyung Lee, Edward W. Hinton Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law
Presented by: CISCDR (Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Conflict and Dispute Resolution)
Summary: CISCDR Distinguished Scholar-in-Residence Lecture
Does culture play a role in the lawyering process? on dispute resolution methods? What exactly is culture? This lecture will address these important questions. Some commentators and practitioners assert that culture is of little or no consequence in dispute resolution, and that it need not be studied. Professor Lee will address, and largely question, such a view. He urges that culture may be a factor in many disputes, quite significant in some situations, and less so in others. Culture is perhaps most pronounced in the international setting, but is also present in the domestic setting. In all events, the failure to recognize cultural norms and differences may lead to missed opportunities in settlement, or an exacerbation of the dispute. Ultimately, participants in the dispute resolution arena whether parties, counsel, or neutrals must be aware of the presence and impact of culture, toward facilitating fair settlement.
A Senior Fellow at the University of Missouri School of Laws Center for the Study of Dispute Resolution, Ilhyung Lee has served as a panelist in domain name disputes administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization. He is a member of the London Court of International Arbitration, the National Arbitration Forum, the U.S. Council for International Business, and the National Sports Law Institute.
Prof. Lee s scholarship addresses comparative approaches to individual rights; the intersection of law, society, and culture in Korea; and the impact of culture on the dispute resolution process. He teaches Comparative Constitutional Law, Cross-Cultural Dispute Resolution, and International Commercial Arbitration. Prof. Lee also writes about intellectual property law and teaches Trademarks and Copyright. He has lectured in Japan as a Fulbright Scholar.
Previously, Prof. Lee practiced law at Cravath, Swaine & Moore (New York) and Kim & Chang (Seoul, Korea). He was law clerk to the Honorable Joseph F. Weis, Jr., of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. As a law student at Boston College, Prof. Lee was an articles editor on the law review and received his J.D. Order of the Coif. He earned an M.A. degree from Washington College and a B.A. from the University of Maryland.
November 13, 2009
Lunch Lecture: “Dispute Resolution under the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy”
Speaker: Jeffrey Samuels, David L. Brennan Professor of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law and Technology; University of Akron School of Law
Speaker introduction: Professor Jacqueline Lipton, Case Western Reserve University School of Law
November 13, 2009
Panel 3: “Internet Domain Name Dispute Resolution”
Moderator: Professor Jacqueline Lipton, Case Western Reserve University School of Law
Panelists:
Ilhyung Lee, Edward W. Hinton Professor of Law, Senior Fellow, Center for the Study of Dispute Resolution, University of Missouri School of Law
Paul D. McGrady, Jr., Shareholder, Greenberg Traurig; author, McGrady on Domain Names