The Missing History of Domains
Every year, millions of domains change hands—shaping markets, media, and the language of the internet. Yet there is no central historical record, no standards body, and no authoritative lens on how these assets drive industry outcomes. The National Domain Association (NDA) exists to document that story, protect participants, and set standards for the future.
Why the History Is Missing
Fragmented Market
Sales are spread across registrars, brokers, private deals, and NDAs. Stories get lost; data is inconsistent.
No Central Authority
Other industries have associations and registries. Domains—our digital real estate—never had an institutional recordkeeper.
Opaque Standards
Terminology and processes differ. Without shared definitions, buyers and media can’t compare like-for-like.
Underreported Impact
Landmark sales and portfolio acquisitions influence whole sectors, yet often vanish after the press cycle.
The Association’s Role
Create an authoritative record of notable sales, portfolios, and market-shaping categories.
Publish clear, useful definitions—registry, portal, authority set, monopoly portfolio, and more.
Promote verified ownership, escrowed transfers, and transparent auction standards.
Give journalists, analysts, and investors credible context and comps they can cite.
Assemble monopoly-grade portfolios for single-winner auctions that create real-world category leadership.
From Lost Deals to a Living Record
| Era | What Happened | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Early .com Boom | High-profile sales; many private records | Set the precedent for domain assets as strategic IP, but the history was not centralized. |
| Modern Portfolio Era | Category sets & exact-match authority | Bundles begin to control language and search intent across whole industries. |
| Today | Monopoly-grade auctions (single winner) | The Association standardizes process, documentation, and post-sale transparency. |
Why This Benefits the Market
Contribute to the Record
Submit a Historical Sale
Have a notable sale or portfolio acquisition? Share documentation so it can be preserved for industry reference.
Request a Briefing
Journalists and analysts can request embargoed briefings, comps, and fact sheets for coverage.
Media / Analyst RequestAll requests are verified before records or portfolio lists are released.
© National Domain Association — Guardians of Digital Real Estate
