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Technology Stocks : FSVP-FIND/SVP

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To: GARY P GROBBEL who wrote (12)5/15/2000 2:59:00 PM
From: caly  Read Replies (1) of 18
 
Still off topic, but I find it interesting. Here's more on the idealab/Tuvalu .tv domain auction. Also, I just realized that idealab! filed for an IPO last month.

ipo.com

Monday May 15 02:30 PM EDT

DotTV auctions 'triple' expectations

By Marilynn Wheeler, ZDNet News

What's in a domain name? Big, big bucks. The tiny nation of Tuvalu has already reaped twice its annual revenues from its .tv domain.

There's not a place on the globe where the letters TV don't mean media and money. Least of all Tuvalu, the fly-speck nation in the South Pacific whose national budget has doubled since selling its .tv domain.

"TV is the most recognizable two-letter symbol in the world," said Lou Kerner, CEO of DotTV, the Idealab! subsidiary that formally launched May 15.

The site has been auctioning off names since its beta launch on April 6. The top bidder, an entertainment industry giant that Kerner declined to name, paid $100,000 for its domain name.

Kerner declined to disclose total sales, although he would say they've surpassed all projections.

"Broadly, we're about triple, both in the volume of registrations and revenues," he said in a telephone interview. There are no plans for a DotTV IPO, he added.

Tuvalu, which sold the rights to its .tv domain to Idealab! of Pasadena, Calif., has already grossed $17 million from the deal.

According to its agreement with DotTV, the nation of 10,600 people receives $1 million quarterly capped at $50 million over a 10-year period. In addition, Tuvalu has what Kerner called "a significant, double-digit ownership" position in DotTV, plus a seat on the company's board of directors.

That's not bad for a country with an annual budget of $14 million. "I think it's a great deal for both parties," Kerner said.

Not bad either for a market where the going rate for a domain name was $35 per year. Even at those prices, Network Solutions, until last year the exclusive registrar for .com, .gov, and .org domains, grossed $221 million in 1999.

Three DotTV sites have already gone live: German music site Onyx.tv; auction site IbidLive.tv, which will simulcast broadcast and live auctions; and something called Surferchannel.tv.

"One of the major sports leagues has gotten domain names for all of their teams," he said. "They're eventually planning to stream all of their games."

Hottest auctions

The hottest auctions so far are for China.tv, Free.tv and Net.tv. With two months to go, the bids for all three are at $100,000.

Roughly half of the sales have been to international clients. That was expected, Kerner said. "It's the first truly global top-level domain name."

MGM has acquired nine domain names, the company announced Monday: MGM.tv, UnitedArtists.tv, JamesBond.tv, 007.tv, PinkPanther.tv, StargateSG1.tv, ChatroomAmerica.tv, SexWars.tv and AmericanGladiators.tv.

Zee TV, India's leading broadcaster and Hong Kong's TVB have already sewed up their domain names. Sony has purchased domain names for a couple of its cable channels, and so has NBC.

While .tv is a natural top-level domain for entertainment media and broadcast companies, Kerner hopes DotTV will one day become a home for any type of Web content site.

He's most excited about DotTV's deals with Sega Entertainment, Pegasus Communications, a leading provider of Direct TV services, and Microcast, a leader in streaming services technology.

"Don't get me wrong, I think they're all great companies, and I think they're going to be DotTV companies," said Kerner, a former Goldman Sachs analyst who followed the cable and broadcast industries. "But the early adopters are the ones to watch. By the time the big guys do anything, it's passe."
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