/ 28 October 2006

Who on earth would pay $1-million for hell?

No one was buying hell on Friday — or at least its red-hot web address. Hell.com was among hundreds of internet domain names up for auction in Hollywood, Florida, by domain asset management provider Moniker.com, a unit of marketing services firm Seevast.

The owner put a minimum price of $1-million on the underworld’s domain, confident of high interest after the salacious address, Sex.com, sold for about $12-million earlier this year. But there were no takers with bids failing to reach the reserve price.

”The world is still alive and well. Nobody is going to hell right now,” Seevast chief executive Lance Podell told Reuters, adding that the domain would now be part of a silent auction.

Moniker was selling Hell.com on behalf of a group called BAT Flli LLC, whose founder Kenneth Aronson registered the name in 1995.

It’s not the first time that Aronson has tried to sell Hell.com. He put the address on the auction block in April 2000, at a starting bid of $8-million.

In an interview with Reuters in 2000, Aronson said members of thefinal.org, an enigmatic collective of digital artists and creative visionaries, were using Hell.com as a private destination for their work.

According to the site, Hell.com is a ”private parallel web” not accessible with a web browser.

The auction on Friday included a list of domain names such as cameras.com, which pulled in $1,5-million. Sexeducation.com that sold for $120 000 and babies.net which went for $26 000.

Flowers.mobi, an address with the new extension for mobile devices, went for $200 000, while fun.mobi pulled in $100 000.

A boom in internet advertising driven by companies such as Google and Yahoo! have sent prices for sought-after domain names soaring. – Reuters