Adopting a Domain Name?
Before you adopt or buy a domain, it's prudent to research its history. A domain with a shady past can be like inheriting a haunted mansion ... intriguing but fraught with unseen pitfalls. Tools and services can unearth these digital skeletons, ensuring your new online abode is more sanctuary than scare.
Adopting a Domain? Donât Buy a Haunted Mansion by Mistake!
So, youâre ready to take your online empire to the next level. Youâve brainstormed the perfect domain name (something catchy like cat chi .com) and youâre dreaming of SEO glory, viral fame, and the sweet sound of PayPal notifications. You check, itâs available, and you pounce. But wait! Have you investigated its past life?
Adopting a domain without checking its history is like buying a house without asking why the last owner sold it for half the market value. Sure, itâs got a nice porch, but no one told you about the poltergeist who plays dubstep at 3 AM. A domain with a shady past might not have literal ghosts, but the skeletons in its closet can spook your business in ways you never saw coming.
My Unfortunate Tale of Domain Doom
Let me share a cautionary tale. I once purchased a seemingly innocent domain, letâs call it Happyapple .net. It had that perfect quirky vibe, like the kind of domain a hip startup would use to sell artisanal socks. I envisioned a bright, sunny future for my site. But after I set it up, strange things started happening.
First, Google wouldnât rank me. At all. I was like a ghost on the internet. Then, I noticed visitors were bouncing faster than cats from a cucumber. Finally, I discovered the ugly truth: my domain had a past. It turned out Happyapple .net had once been home to a "get rich quick" scheme offering dubious pineapple-based investments. (Yes, apparently thatâs a thing.)
The digital skeletons in its closet included spammy backlinks, a blacklisting from email services, and a "Apple Ponzi" Reddit thread that had racked up 20,000 angry comments. No amount of rebranding could wash off that sticky, spam-soaked residue.
How to Avoid Adopting a Digital Horror Show
Lucky for you, tools exist to help you uncover a domainâs checkered past before you buy it. Here are some steps to ensure you donât inherit a haunted mansion when all you wanted was a cozy online bungalow:
- Use the Wayback Machine
Go to archive.org and check out snapshots of the domain from years past. If you see a bunch of flashing ads, suspicious loan offers, or the phrase âenlarge yourâŠâ â run. - Check the Blacklist
Services like MXToolbox can tell you if the domain is flagged on email blacklists. If it is, youâll have trouble sending emails without them being treated like spammy chain letters from 2005. - Inspect SEO Metrics
Use tools like Ahrefs, SEMrush, or Moz to see the domainâs backlink profile. Are there links from respectable sources, or is it mostly shady sites with names like casino99superdeals .com? - Google It
Seriously, just Google the domain name. Youâd be surprised how often people overlook this. If itâs associated with scams, adult content, or a MLM pyramid scheme, youâll likely see red flags in the search results. - WHOIS Lookup
A WHOIS lookup can show the domainâs previous owners and registration history. If you see multiple rapid transfers or a "privacy-protected" redaction, consider it a warning sign.
The Happy Ending (Sort Of)
After realizing Happyapple .net was a lost cause, I had to abandon it like a cursed pirate ship. I cut my losses, picked a shiny new domain, and moved on. The lesson? Donât skip the history check! It might take an extra hour to dig into the past, but itâll save you from inheriting a domain with more baggage than an overbooked flight.
Remember, when it comes to domains, itâs not just about the name â itâs about the reputation. Do your due diligence and make sure your online sanctuary isnât secretly a digital house of horrors.
Because, trust me, no one wants to spend their time exorcising spam demons when they could be building their dream site. đ»đđ±
Before committing to your dream site, make sure youâre not inheriting spam ghosts, blacklists, or scam skeletons. A quick history check could save you from owning a digital haunted mansion!
Similar stories? Let us know!
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Recent Comments
35
Thank you for the warning. Fleeky. I have often wondered about the ghosts in the past for URLs.
Another issue is that your URL may offend some people. We often overlook the different generations and the symbolism of the chosen URL.
Often what is considered dinnertime conversation subjects in some households are taboo in others. We can't always screen for everything. You have to make some judgment calls along the way.
Attention-getting image!
Sami
Good Morning Fleeky,
Very good advice! As I got my domain names in 2017 and nothing strange has happened, at least to my knowledge, I think I am ok.
Greetings from the south of Spain.
Taetske
Good morning Taetske, good to know when a site is ok indeed! Thank you for sharing. Happy end of week!
Ps
We are flooded with rain...
Hey, Fleeky, I've been there too!
The first was a spammers mansion that took me several months to figure out (can't remember what it was called now!).
The second was called "ldcmindset" (learn, design, create) and I should have realized also stands for "London District Council." It was growing for a while until the London DC created their own Mindset page or post! Many prospective job seekers found my site, engagement went to zero and Google organically reduced ranking for my site to the hundreds. So my site became a ghost!
As André says, buyer beware.
;-)
Richard
Yes... down the rabbit hole...
Thank you for sharing
My case was similar
Yuk
Had to abandon...
What also happens is that if your domain ranks high, people just make new domains with other extensions and just copy... Mining your efforts..
Happens on social media as well, they use your domain for their stuff
đ„ș
It would probably be OK is Casper was there but he has some who would not be as friendly so sure buyer beware and due your due diligence in checking before you buy like you normally elsewhere.
Thank you
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Hey Flleky,
thanks for the tips and the warning!
Best wishes,
Boris
Welcome Boris!
Congrats on your latest achievments!
đ
Cheers, my friend đ€©