Forum Moderators: phranque
Anyone else expierence this? I thought it worked similiar to ebay. If nobody else bid I should have won it for 1.00
Here's more-
I had some bad experiences with Pool, but my (factual, rational) post about it was deleted by moderators here. I still have no idea why.
My primary beef with Pool is that there's no intermediary dialog box saying "You have ordered the domain: widgets.com. Please confirm." So if, say, you're on laptop with a tiny screen, and you shrink your browser window down so you're working within tight confines, and are off by a milllimeter when scrolling your window through long lists of domains, your little misclick can buy you a domain you never intended to buy. There's not even a confirmation pop-up of the puchase. You'd never even know it had happened...
Pool was very, very uncooperative. It was pretty bad.
Tell me,anyone ever heard of an eCommerce site on which you buy an item merely by clicking on it, with no confirmation/checkout screen en route?
(What happens is that my 'deal' was with Pool.com, but then they seem to sub-contract out the snapping up of domains to various registrars, and whoever gets it first gets the money from Pool.com.)
I'm having BIG problems getting the DNS details updated -- no response from them for over a week now and I've had to resort to lodging it as an issue with ICANN.
So Pool.com seem good -- but it seems to me that their partners have the capacity to let them down.
If you weren't willing to pay $100, why did you indicate that you were willing to pay $100?
I think you are missing the point. From what I read in the original post, this was supposed to be a "proxy" type bid, where you set a maximum, and pool.com's system automatically increases your bid up to that $100 amount if someone else bids against you. If they don't get any other bids, the amount you get charged should be less, probably whatever the minimum bid was.