The Real Price of Sex.com

Published: 11 April 2001 y., Wednesday
Porn and the Internet were made for each other. In exchange for some much-desired privacy, users are willing to deal with fly-by-night companies and even give their credit card data to questionable vendors. The news reports say that Sex, the domain name, is worth at least US$65 million. That's how much a federal judge awarded the rightful owner from the pockets of a cybersquatter who made an estimated $40 million in profit over a five-year stretch. The value set raised a lot of eyebrows. After all, conventional wisdom held that the most expensive domain to date was Business.com, which sold for $7.5 million back in 1999. Naturally, sex trumps business. But this verdict should be viewed as undeniable proof that sex on the Internet is business. Huge business. The battle over Sex.com is a rare glimpse into just how much money is changing hands in the underground Web economy. It is confirmation that pornography is the dominant force on the Web, even after a good five years of legitimate e-commerce growth. Very few people were shocked to learn that federal investigators were charging some New York-based Web pornographers with illegally billing customers millions of dollars. One official admitted that thousands of such cases probably go unreported because of the nature of the complaints.
Šaltinis: E-Commerce Times
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

IBM prepares Opteron workstation charge

IBM will bulk up its line of Opteron-based products later this year with the roll-out of a new workstation more »

Net Voice, Speech Stamped as Standards

After years as working implementations, the Voice XML 2.0 (VXML) and Speech Recognition Grammar Specifications (SRGS) won the World Wide Web Consortium's (W3C) seal of approval Tuesday more »

A New Ea of Wireless Services in Latvia

Nortel Networks Selected by Telekom Baltija to Deploy CDMA2000 1X 450 in Latvia; Network Planned to Offer Voice, High-Speed Data Services more »

Europe Considers Harsh Piracy Law

The European Parliament approved a controversial piracy law that would allow local police to raid the homes and offices of suspected intellectual-property pirates more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Outdoor screens - not for the entertainment only

"Unicaster" – for advertising, announcements, presenting nightly life in Vilnius... more »

E-books for those who are afraid of time

Such editions as encyclopaedias, dictionaries, albums and geographical maps were issued on the CDs at first. Nowadays majority of the libraries, archives and museums is concerned of their funds’ security thus they are accumulating the copies of the books in the electronic libraries. more »

Warning: Blogs Can Be Infectious

The most-read webloggers aren't necessarily the ones with the most original ideas, say researchers at Hewlett-Packard Labs more »

Windows could lose Media Player in EU tangle

Removing the media player from Windows may help level the playing field for competitors more »

Macromedia looks to extend Flash technology

Company also readies Flex framework more »