Andrew Wright
Top Contributor
Saw an article earlier today on Domainer which has now been deleted. What gives?
The comments are still viewable...
The comments are still viewable...
Hi Scott, there sure are a lot of twist and turns here, but seriously why would we pass up on $25k and at the same time cause a lot of harm to Drop's reputation to do anything but the secure the domain to our highest bidder. That is just not logical.
While I'm a big fan of Drop, this bit bugs me. If you were testing this, you must have thought there was a chance is was not fixed. By running the test, did you not consider the impact your testing could have on potential bidders (your customers), if the system has not been fixed?After the recent patch released the night before, we had hoped it was, so we tested it with another domain that was dropping. We wanted this bug fixed as it should not be able to do that.
We believed it was beneficial for our clients, as trying to catch domains is what we do. If we had caught the domain, there would be no press and no posts on domainer and our client would be extremely happy with Drop and we would be very happy as well once he paid his invoice
Instead we have misguided bad press and no one to invoice.
That might be so, but it does not answer my question, of whether you considered the potential impact on the bidder.We believed it was beneficial for our clients, as trying to catch domains is what we do. If we had caught the domain, there would be no press and no posts on domainer and our client would be extremely happy with Drop and we would be very happy as well once he paid his invoice
Some of it may the misguided, but you did manipulate the result of an auction, so surely some of the bad press is deserved, is it not?Instead we have misguided bad press and no one to invoice.