who do u think would want this domain name? who pays out cash daily?
If you are new to domains and looking to buy, sell and learn about domains then you have come to the right place. DNForum is the largest domain name community on the internet and continues to grow every day. There are over 105,000 domainers on DNForum doing everything from buying domains, selling domains, learning about domains and discussing domains. Take a minute and Register.
Register Today on DNForum IT'S FREE!Hello,
New here and have several domains, but I will just post
the two now. Not sure how many I can post at a time
for ball park valuations, but I appreciate this forum
and the help the site offers. Great site.
cash-paid-daily.com
cash-paid-daily.net
Regards,
Aaron
who do u think would want this domain name? who pays out cash daily?
$0 - hyphen city!
$15 hype it on ebay you may get it
NameHoarder.com -yes I am one! "I can't stop registering them!" UGH!
Sorry I meant through a transfer fee of $15.
set open. bid at $1 or $2 for the pair and you could make a bit more
NameHoarder.com -yes I am one! "I can't stop registering them!" UGH!
"-" are a domain killer...unless it something like used-cars.com, and then it's still iffy...just MHO
Winter of 2000 I operated an affiliate program
I created and paid commissions daily. It was small
and the best month I had was $1200, but costs
were high and I spent all my time to get that.
PayPal allows one to earn cash daily if for instance
you operate an ebay business. Money is put into
your account and with your Visa/Debit you can
withdraw "cash" that same day at an ATM. Just
did that the other day in fact with a course I sold
on ebay.
Anyway, my thinking at that time, winter 2000, was
that I would collect the best daily pay opportunities
and work them through this main site. AmeriPlan pays
daily as does Trim International .... so they are out
there.
I will place this one in the "must be developed"
category as well and once again thank you.
Aaron
See my signature - PayPal advertising is inaccurate and designed to force customers to upgrade to expensive services when they thought it was a "free" service.
Bookmarks