RDS Daily #4 — noreply.ai

Daily domain intelligence: noreply.ai — the universal email standard meets the hottest TLD, at $505 with 19 bids. Plus Splice.ai survives a reverse hijacking attempt, a $10 domain turns into $5K, and today's best auctions.

📖 ~6 min read

Daily domain intelligence from RobotDomainSearch — auction picks, industry news, and market insights powered by real data.


🔥 Today’s Domain Pick

noreply.ai — $505 current bid (19 bids)

Every inbox in the world has seen it. “noreply@” is the universal sender address for automated emails — password resets, shipping confirmations, two-factor codes, newsletter receipts. It’s one of the most recognized patterns in digital communication, and now it sits on the .ai TLD at auction.

The numbers tell a story:

  • RDS Valuation: $400 – $505 – $700 (95% confidence)
  • Quality Score: 76 (top 5% of today’s auctions)
  • Current Bid: $505 (19 bids)
  • Search Volume: 47,000/mo
  • Extensions Taken: 187 (massive brand signal)
  • Registered: 2023
  • Ends: Today, March 14 @ 3:00 PM UTC

Our valuation API pegs the mid estimate at $505 with 95% confidence — heavily anchored by today’s auction data. But the heuristic engine reveals hidden upside: the .ai TLD scores 90/100, pronounceability hits 85/100, and comparable .ai sales tell a dramatic story — specs.ai ($85K), cloudx.ai ($100K), cursive.ai ($70K), gandalf.ai ($65K), orchid.ai ($80K), intuitive.ai ($125K). The statistical median for brandable .ai domains sits at $66,000.

Name-Search-Presence scores “noreply” at 67/100 — and here’s what’s fascinating: no significant brand owns the name. Search results exclusively discuss “noreply” as the universal email format (noreply@company.com), which means the keyword has massive recognition but zero brand competition. That’s a rare combination.

The timing couldn’t be better. As AI agents increasingly handle email communications — from customer support bots to autonomous scheduling assistants — “noreply.ai” isn’t just a domain name. It’s a category. An AI email infrastructure company, a no-reply management SaaS, or an automated messaging platform would kill for this brand. At $505, nineteen bidders already see it.

→ View Auction on Namecheap


📰 Domain News

Splice.ai Owner Survives Reverse Hijacking by Music Platform

Distributed Creation, the company behind splice.com, tried to take splice.ai through a UDRP — and got slapped with a reverse domain name hijacking ruling. The panelist found that Splice.ai GmbH is a legitimate Austrian company founded in 2017, awarded a grant by the Vienna Business Agency, with corporate registration and filed accounts. The Complainant’s lawyers characterized the business as a “facade of legitimacy” and a “sham,” submitted barely legible screenshots, and invented the concept of “aggravated passive holding” — which, as the panelist noted, isn’t a recognized concept under any UDRP precedent. A reminder that owning a .com doesn’t give you automatic rights to the .ai version, especially when someone is running a real business on it.

Source: DomainNameWire · Mar 13

$10 Domain Closes Three Deals, Returns $5K+

Elliot Silver shared a textbook patience play: a three-word .com bought for $10 in a DropCatch backorder sat untouched for years. Listed at $997 on Afternic, someone bought it via lease-to-own, paid four months ($339), then canceled. He raised the price to $2,997 — another LTO buyer paid three months ($719) before canceling. He raised it again to $4,999. This time? Full BIN sale. Total return: over $5,000 from a $10 acquisition. The lesson: LTO cancellations aren’t failures — they’re price discovery signals. Each cancellation gave him confidence to raise the ask.

Source: DomainInvesting · Mar 13

Google Wins AntigravityAI.org UDRP After Launch-Day Registration

Google filed a UDRP against AntigravityAI.org — a domain registered the same day Google announced its ANTIGRAVITY AI product in November 2025. Despite Google’s trademarks still being pending, the panel found that the product launch, media coverage, and website materials were enough to establish common law rights. The real nail in the coffin: the respondent’s site mimicked Google’s pages, used Google branding, listed Google as copyright owner, and appeared to offer downloads of the software. Classic launch-day squatting meets passing off. The domain was ordered transferred. For domain investors, the takeaway is clear: registering brand-name domains on announcement day and copying the brand’s website is a fast track to losing the UDRP.

Source: DomainGang · Mar 13


⏰ Best Auctions Closing Soon

Curated from 122,000+ auctions across all platforms. Scored on valuation-to-bid ratio, quality score, search volume, and brand potential. TLD diversity enforced.

🏷️ 62j.com — $505 · 47 bids · QS: 68 · GoDaddy: $9,378

RDS Valuation: $400 – $600 – $800 (85% confidence)

The valuation model anchors heavily on the current auction price, but the broader picture favors upside. Three-character .com domains are a finite asset class — only 46,656 possible combinations exist, and most are spoken for. The statistical median for numeric-mix .coms sits at $64,200. This one has been registered since 2005 and previously sold for $310 in 2015. Now at $505 with 47 bids and climbing aggressively. GoDaddy sees 18.6x upside at $9,378.

Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores 57/100 — “62J” primarily maps to sections of the Minnesota Statutes related to health care and drug regulations, giving the acronym built-in keyword equity in the legal and healthcare space.

At 47 bids, this is the most actively contested domain ending today. Short alphanumeric .coms have steady demand from Chinese investors and tech startups that want memorable, globally neutral brands.

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💎 nuvi.net — $20 · 15 bids · QS: 77 · Estibot: $14,000

RDS Valuation: $10 – $20 – $50 (90% confidence)

Our model prices nuvi.net conservatively at $20 mid — anchored by today’s auction data. But Estibot sees $14,000, a staggering 700x multiple from the current bid. The divergence is notable: RDS weights the active auction heavily, while Estibot looks at the .net LLLL segment median of $12,500.

Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores a strong 82/100 — “Nuvi” is already established across multiple brands: Nutifood’s Nuvi children’s dairy line in Vietnam, NUVI skincare with FDA-approved products, and of course Garmin’s iconic Nüvi GPS line that made the word familiar to millions.

The highest quality score in today’s dataset. Clean four-letter brandable with 3,600 monthly searches and 73 extensions taken. The .net TLD gives it developer and SaaS credibility. At $20 with 15 bids, this is the kind of domain that slips through while everyone fights over the flashier auctions.

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🍽️ tables.me — $595 BIN · 0 bids · SV: 138,000 · Estibot: $2,900

RDS Valuation: $400 – $595 – $800 (85% confidence)

Our model pegs the fair value right at the current BIN price of $595, backed by strong fundamentals: word score 95/100 (dictionary word), brandable pattern recognition, and .me segment medians. The heuristic engine is aligned with the market on this one.

Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores 62/100 — “tables” shows broad commercial presence dominated by furniture retailers (IKEA, Maiden Home, Room & Board, Canadel), with applications spanning dining, coffee tables, and customizable furniture. The word’s versatility across industries is its strength.

A dictionary word with 138,000 monthly searches and zero bids. The .me TLD makes it personal: “my tables,” “book tables.” With 142 extensions taken, the keyword has deep commercial roots. At $595 Buy Now, this is priced at fair value — but the zero-bid count means everyone else is sleeping on it. Ends today.

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🔥 Hot Auctions This Week

The most competitive auctions across all platforms — ranked by bid count, with valuation analysis. Deduplicated from previous issues.

lsoo.com — $280 · 54 bids · QS: 70 · Estibot: $13,000

RDS Valuation: $5,000 – $15,000 – $50,000 (75% confidence)

Our valuation API sees significant upside — $15,000 mid puts the current $280 bid at a 54x discount. The statistical median for four-letter .coms sits at $112,000, but RDS adjusts downward for low brandability and the random-character pattern. Comparable sales and 22 years of domain age support the five-figure range.

Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores 32/100 — “lsoo” has minimal brand presence, primarily matching the “Like Stories of Old” YouTube channel by creator Tom van der Linden. The low score means no brand competition for the name.

The most-bid non-featured domain in today’s entire dataset. Four-letter .com with a majestic citation flow of 12 and registered since 2004. With 54 bids from a $15 start, the market is aggressively repricing this asset.

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leftover.app — $31 · 12 bids · QS: 63 · SV: 8,000

RDS Valuation: $500 – $1,700 – $5,000 (65% confidence)

Mid estimate of $1,700 represents a 55x multiple from the current $31 bid. Comparable sales like timeless.app ($16,999) anchor the upper range, while the .app TLD’s relative weakness and lack of development keep confidence at 65%. Sedo lists an asking price of $2,999, aligning with our mid-to-high range.

Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores a strong 82/100 — “leftover” is a universal English word appearing heavily in contexts of food waste reduction, unsold retail inventory, and sustainable fashion. No significant brand owns it, meaning huge keyword recognition with zero competition.

A dictionary word on the .app TLD at $31. “Leftover” maps perfectly to food waste reduction apps, meal planning tools, and inventory management — all growing categories. With 8,000 monthly searches and 71 extensions taken, the keyword has proven demand. The .app TLD adds instant mobile credibility and comes with built-in HTTPS. At $31 with 12 bids, this is moving fast from its $1 start.

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ahw.org — $132 · 19 bids · QS: 62 · Estibot: $12,000 · GoDaddy: $6,447

RDS Valuation: $12,000 – $18,000 – $25,000 (85% confidence)

Triple-validator alignment: RDS ($18K mid), Estibot ($12K), and GoDaddy ($6,447) all agree this domain is worth far more than the current $132 bid. Our model draws on comparable three-letter .org sales averaging $17,000 with recent sales reaching $45,000 — statistical anchors show a median of $12,906 and mean of $17,401. At 85% confidence, this is one of our highest-conviction calls today.

Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores a strong 82/100 — AHW LLC is a well-established John Deere dealership founded in 1932, headquartered in Dwight, Illinois, operating multiple locations across east-central Illinois and western Indiana. The acronym carries real commercial weight with a 90+ year business behind it.

Three-letter .org at $132 — that’s a 136x discount to RDS mid valuation. “AHW” has 2,400 monthly searches and 92 extensions taken. Three-letter .org domains are increasingly scarce as nonprofits, open-source projects, and advocacy groups snap them up.

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📚 Domain History: .ai

The .ai domain is the country code TLD for Anguilla, a small Caribbean island of 15,000 people. Delegated in 1995, it languished in obscurity for two decades — until artificial intelligence went mainstream. In 2017, as AI startups exploded, .ai registrations began doubling year over year. Anguilla noticed. By 2023, the island was earning over $32 million annually from .ai domain fees — roughly 20% of its government revenue. Today, .ai has become the de facto TLD for AI companies, with registrations like x.ai (Elon Musk), character.ai, and perplexity.ai commanding seven-figure valuations. It’s arguably the most successful accidental TLD branding in internet history: a tiny island’s country code became the industry standard for the biggest technology wave since the internet itself.

→ Explore the full history of .ai on RobotDomainSearch


Built by RobotDomainSearch — domain intelligence for humans and agents. Data sourced from 1M+ live auctions across Namecheap, Sedo, and Dynadot. Valuations powered by the RDS Valuation API.