dotMobi Set to Release Premium Names, Including Sex.mobi

DUBLIN — In a blog post Wednesday, dotMobi CEO Neil Edwards announced that the organization soon will release approximately 500 premium .mobi domain names, including the highly sought after Sex.mobi.

Addressing what he called the most popular three rumors concerning dotMobi, Edwards stated that “sex.mobi will go on sale very soon. It is not a joke.”

“We will be releasing approximately 500 high value names for sale in the coming months,” Edwards wrote. “These names will be sold through three to four of the well know online and live auction venues from September to next January.”

Noting that many critics have asserted that the company waited too long to release premium names and “killed the market need for dotMobi,” Edwards strongly defended the decision to hold off.

“I make no apology that dotMobi waited one year to start selling premium names,” Edwards wrote. “We are a well funded company who has a long term view on dotMobi. The content publishing tools were not available last year to build good mobile content sites. It was not in the best interest of the consumer or the company to release names for sale when buyers would have had no good way to produce content. The tools are now readily available for building good mobile sites through site.mobi, dev.mobi, and many of dotMobi’s 100-plus resellers.”

Edwards also answered critics who have asserted that the company’s investors had no intention of doing anything real with the TLD, and merely “created the company as a money making scam.”

“dotMobi’s investors are building new products and services utilizing the .mobi domain name, the new tools available at dev.mobi, and using dotMobi to push out new industry services like our upcoming mobile phone database and our content directory,” Edwards wrote.

Edwards suggested that his company’s critics may have had unrealistic timeframes in mind for the development of the TLD, given that the companies involved are very large — and very cautious — mobile industry entities.

“You have to remember that we are talking about the biggest mobility companies in the world whose product life cycles are long… and confidential,” Edwards wrote. “The investors behind dotMobi are no more going to publicly pre-announce their competitive services using dotMobi than Apple did with the iPhone.”

Related:  

Copyright © 2024 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

'The Only People Who've Been Hurt by This Are My Wife and Me': An Exclusive Interview With Joe Gow

Only hours after the Universities of Wisconsin Board of Regents took the unusually extreme step of firing veteran communications professor Joe Gow — stripping him of tenure for creating and appearing in adult content — XBIZ spoke exclusively with him about his case.

Creator of Hentaied Universe Launches All-Access Streaming Service 'Hentaied Pro'

Romero Mr. Alien, the creator of the Hentaied Universe, has launched a new streaming service combining all eight of his brands on one website, Hentaied.Pro.

Adult Time Partners With VR Brands TabooVR, ForbVR

Adult Time has partnered with TabooVR and ForbVR to expand the VR offerings on its content platform.

U of Wisconsin Fires Tenured Prof. Joe Gow Over OnlyFans Content

The Universities of Wisconsin Board of Regents has fired veteran communications professor Joe Gow, stripping him of tenure for unremorsefully creating and appearing in adult content.

California Tightens Restrictions on Subscription Auto-Renewals

California this week enacted a new law that significantly tightens the rules regarding automatic renewal of paid website subscriptions.

Alabama Lawmaker Calls AV Law 'Successful' After Pornhub Withdrawal

Republican State Rep. Ben Robbins declared in a radio interview Wednesday that Pornhub’s decision to shut down access in Alabama indicates that the state’s new age verification law is “successful.”

New 'Digital Replicas' Law Protects California Performers

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed into law AB 2602, which regulates how digital replicas are addressed in personal and professional services contracts.

Lustery Adds AI Protection to Performer Contracts

Lustery has updated its performer contracts with a new clause ensuring that AI will not be used to create additional content featuring performers' likenesses, or to replace performers’ work without their consent.

Performers' Blacklisting Lawsuit Against Meta Dismissed by Judge

A federal judge in California dismissed this week the lawsuit filed by three performers in 2022 claiming that Meta conspired with OnlyFans to blacklist rival premium fan platforms’ talent.

U.S. House Revives Controversial KOSA in 2.0 Version

The U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce has advanced two internet regulation bills, including a vastly revised version of the controversial Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), which had stalled after passing the Senate.

Show More