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Backpage.com is now a Streamate White label
Backpage.com Domain Now Redirects to MILFs.com, which is a Streamate white label.
Nearly six years after the U.S. Department of Justice seized Backpage.com for its central role in facilitating prostitution and sex trafficking, including involving minors, the notorious domain has resurfaced — now redirecting to a live adult webcam site known as MILFs.com. The twist comes after the Backpage.com domain, once seized and disabled by federal authorities, was allowed to expire, fell into pending delete status, and was subsequently snapped up and auctioned by domain reseller DropCatch. The domain ultimately sold for $259,500, according to auction records, reigniting public discussion over the site’s dark legacy and the apparent failure to maintain federal control over a high-profile digital property. You can read the full story at 🔗 https://fleshbot.com/biz/post/backpage-com-domain-now-redirects-to-milfs-com/ |
I wonder how much income the Backpage.com domain is earning them now?
Any guesses? |
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J edgar homo would be proud.
They also seized the myredbook escort review forum that was great back when we wuz free. https://slantist.com/myredbook-fbi/ snip Couldn't Live Without Until last summer, pretty much anyone buying or selling sex in the San Francisco Bay Area used myRedBook.com. For more than a decade, the site commonly referred to as RedBook served as a vast catalog of carnal services, a mashup of Craigslist, Yelp, and Usenet where sex workers and hundreds of thousands of their customers […] ffredbook1f Victor Cobo Until last summer, pretty much anyone buying or selling sex in the San Francisco Bay Area used myRedBook.com. For more than a decade, the site commonly referred to as RedBook served as a vast catalog of carnal services, a mashup of Craigslist, Yelp, and Usenet where sex workers and hundreds of thousands of their customers could connect, converse, and make arrangements for commercial sex. RedBook tapped into the persistent, age-old, bottomless appetite for prostitution and made it safer and more civilized. The site was efficient, well stocked, and probably too successful for its own good. Launched in 1999 by a Mountain View, California, tech entrepreneur named Eric “Red” Omuro, RedBook began as a modest hub for mongers (Internet slang for johns) to discuss the local scene and post reviews of escorts. As it grew, the site expanded beyond the Bay Area, adding sections for Southern California, the Central Coast, Phoenix, Nevada, and the Pacific Northwest. Omuro also added a key functionality—he made it possible for sex workers to advertise their services. RedBook may have been full of racy talk and the promise of erotic assignations, but the site itself was anything but sexy. Its ugly, bare-bones design was straight out of the early 2000s. It resembled a web page you might use to find a new job or a secondhand bike. If you were careful to stay away from the sections where photos automatically displayed, you could easily browse potential sex partners at work and your coworkers would never suspect a thing. RedBook was made up of three main elements. The site's naughty classifieds section contained the sort of ads that used to be the sole domain of alt weeklies' back pages: “*College Girl Gone Wild* (BUSTY SMART BLONDE),” “Sexy & Sweet Asian Here to Please Your Needs,” and “Morning $pecials Daddy Let Me Blow Your Mind.” While ads were free to post, advertisers could opt to pay for premium placement. Then there were dozens of message boards. While the site's most popular forums had names like “Escort 411,” “Street Action,” and “Domination Station,” RedBook also hosted conversations on topics ranging from baseball to bondage, music to massage parlors. Bruce Boston, a data scientist who works for one of Silicon Valley's major tech companies, initially came to the site to find out which strip clubs had the best dancers. He ended up sticking around for four years to join what he describes as the intelligent, provocative, and honest conversations on the site's forums. “It was great,” he says. “You could have an open discussion about your beliefs and thoughts.” Boston participated in conversations on RedBook about everything from Libertarian politics to swinger sex parties. |
i had a go daddy back order for this domain for a long time. How was it sold off and i didn't acquire it? Its been 3+ years i had backorder
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Oops i didn't read they auctioned it. I wish it would of dropped off. hows drop catch get the domain before go daddy backorder? $259,000 fuckkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
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What would you pay for the domain? They really should redirect all subdomains too :pimp :1orglaugh:1orglaugh they are missing out on so much $$$ :Oh crap |
not much but if i got lucky i could of had it. I doubt any one had a back order on it. just used wrong service.
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