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'''Name Intelligence''' offers a variety of tools for domain management, solutions for centralized domain informationsm intellectual property protection, and a semantic name suggestion technology.In 2008, the company became a subsidiary of [[Thought Convergence]], Inc., a company specializes in providing domain information, management, monetization and development tools and technologies for the domain name industry.<ref>[http://blog.domaintools.com/2008/05/thought-convergence-acquires-name-intelligence/ domaintools.com]</ref>
'''Name Intelligence''' offers a variety of tools for domain management, solutions for centralized domain informationsm intellectual property protection, and a semantic name suggestion technology.In 2008, the company became a subsidiary of [[Thought Convergence]], Inc., a company specializes in providing domain information, management, monetization and development tools and technologies for the domain name industry.<ref>[http://blog.domaintools.com/2008/05/thought-convergence-acquires-name-intelligence/ domaintools.com]</ref>
==Products==
Name Intelligence products include Domain Roundtable, an annual conference uniting domain industry professionals and tech savvy individuals focusing on domain assets and new technologies and products in the online marketplace;<ref>[http://domainroundtable.com/home/?page_id=159 Domain Roundtable]</ref> Reverse IP, is the easiest way to find all the .com, .net, .org, .biz, .us, and .info websites hosted on a given IP address; Whois History and Whois search, gives access to a large data base of historical whois records as well as  Front Page Information, Indexed Data, Server Data, Registry Data via Domaintools;<ref>[http://www.domaintools.com/research/whois-history/ Domaintools]</ref>
Domain Registration Directory and Mark Alert.
==Name Intelligence and ICANN==
In 2005, jay Westerdall CEO of Name Intelligence wrote to [[ICANN]] president [[Paul Twomey]] and shared its comments regarding the re-bidding process of the .net gTLD, Westerdall cited, "It is not an appropriate time to change the vendor servicing the .NET GTLD without creating adverse impact to what is currently a stable and predictable resource, and that it might be a more responsible, pragmatic, and appropriate course of action to reconsider the vendor at the next contact renewal option." <ref>[http://forum.icann.org/lists/net-rfp-general/msg00025.html ICANN E-mail Archive]</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 22:03, 24 May 2011


Type: Privately held
Industry: Internet
Founded: 1999
Founder(s): Jay Westerdal
Headquarters: Bellevue, Washington
Country: USA
Website: Name Intelligence.com
Blog: Domain Tools Blog
Key People
Jay Westerdal, CEO & President

Ammar Kubba, CSO

Name Intelligence offers a variety of tools for domain management, solutions for centralized domain informationsm intellectual property protection, and a semantic name suggestion technology.In 2008, the company became a subsidiary of Thought Convergence, Inc., a company specializes in providing domain information, management, monetization and development tools and technologies for the domain name industry.[1]

Products[edit | edit source]

Name Intelligence products include Domain Roundtable, an annual conference uniting domain industry professionals and tech savvy individuals focusing on domain assets and new technologies and products in the online marketplace;[2] Reverse IP, is the easiest way to find all the .com, .net, .org, .biz, .us, and .info websites hosted on a given IP address; Whois History and Whois search, gives access to a large data base of historical whois records as well as Front Page Information, Indexed Data, Server Data, Registry Data via Domaintools;[3] Domain Registration Directory and Mark Alert.

Name Intelligence and ICANN[edit | edit source]

In 2005, jay Westerdall CEO of Name Intelligence wrote to ICANN president Paul Twomey and shared its comments regarding the re-bidding process of the .net gTLD, Westerdall cited, "It is not an appropriate time to change the vendor servicing the .NET GTLD without creating adverse impact to what is currently a stable and predictable resource, and that it might be a more responsible, pragmatic, and appropriate course of action to reconsider the vendor at the next contact renewal option." [4]


References[edit | edit source]