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news Kalin Starts a War with Unstoppable Domains

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Just saw on X/Twitter a tweet by Kalin of seo.domains:
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This asks for even more reading, especially knowing Kalin in person as a highly intelligent person (also an International chess master) who always controls himself..

Asked Grok to do a summary on this highly sensetive topic where 2 sides are involved (and, I, as a business person, personally admire and like them both of them for their business bravery and success).

Ok, let's go. The summary:

Key Points:

Domain investor Kalin Karakehayov has escalated his public criticism of Unstoppable Domains, warning against transfers due to alleged ICANN non-compliance and forced WHOIS privacy changes that could hinder domain sales.
Unstoppable Domains attributes the conflict to Kalin's alleged abuse of their discounted transfer promotion, declining further comment on the ongoing dispute.
Community reactions are divided: some praise Unstoppable's services and question Kalin's motives, while others express caution based on Unstoppable's past practices.
Discussions highlight recent ICANN changes, such as the sunsetting of WHOIS in favor of RDAP, and debates on privacy standards in domain registration.
Evidence suggests this stems from a personal dispute, but it raises broader questions about registrar transparency and compliance in the domain industry.

Brief Overview
Kalin's original thread on January 2, 2026, advises halting transfers to Unstoppable Domains, citing concerns over their WHOIS setup that allegedly transfers ownership details to an offshore entity and enforces privacy without proper notification. This, he claims, reduces visibility for potential buyers. Unstoppable's response points to promotional abuse as the root cause. Follow-up tweets include defenses of Unstoppable, critiques of Kalin's approach, and technical clarifications on ICANN policies.

Implications
While some users report positive experiences with Unstoppable, Kalin's warnings prompt domainers to review their WHOIS/RDAP data. The debate underscores ongoing industry tensions around privacy, promotions, and regulatory adherence. Investors should conduct due diligence, perhaps consulting ICANN directly for compliance concerns.

Detailed Survey of the Dispute and Follow-Ups
The controversy began with Kalin Karakehayov's main post on January 2, 2026, strongly advising against transfers to Unstoppable Domains (@unstoppableweb) due to perceived ICANN compliance issues and questionable practices. He urges checking the thread for details and retweeting for awareness.
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In the thread continuation, Kalin explains that Unstoppable's WHOIS framework changes domain details to their offshore company upon transfer-in, likening it to potential hijacking tactics (though not accusing malice).
Thread Part 1:
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Thread Part 2:
He further claims Unstoppable forces privacy on transfers, hiding emails in WHOIS and potentially causing lost sales, which he views as non-compliant with ICANN rules.
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Thread Part 3:
Kalin advises checking WHOIS via Unstoppable's server (whois.unstoppabledomains.com) using tools, noting over 150,000 domains may be affected.
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Thread Part 4
He concludes by calling for sharing the information widely.
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Early replies include Ish Milly questioning the claims of "questionable products" and "lackluster compliance," calling it potential defamation without more transparency.
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Kalin's Response to Ish Milly
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Unstoppable's rep Brady (x.com/ntropiq) confirms the dispute over large-scale abuse of discounted transfers but won't elaborate.
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Quoted Response
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x.com/DomainJames shares a positive experience with 350 domains at Unstoppable, praising transfers, sales, and support.
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Kalin questions if WHOIS contacts have led to sales, claiming they don't at Unstoppable.

Kalin's Response to Domain James
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Domain James later notes he has privacy turned off due to European preferences:
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@AndreiPolgar.com calls the post nonsensical, noting most registrars default to privacy which can be disabled:
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Kalin highlights lack of notifications and legal requirements for third-party ownership.

Kalin's Response to Andrei
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==

Follow-up tweets on January 3 include x.com/Digi2Trade identifying Unstoppable Domains with a video.
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@jberryhill questions if complaint filed with ICANN.
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Mocks ChatGPT legal advice.
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Notes WHOIS sunset:
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Another on Sunset:
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Kalin denies grudge, emphasizes user protection.
https://x.com/Karakehayov/status/2007232933363622131

Questions Unstoppable's ICANN adherence
https://x.com/Karakehayov/status/2007182434509684918

Mentions class action potential per ChatGPT, warns for new gTLD round.
https://x.com/Karakehayov/status/2007223037062525176

Jokes about hijacked domains value:
https://x.com/Karakehayov/status/2007226186955698585

/I will stop here due to the highly sensetive character of this topic/

The last summary by Grak was:
This extensive exchange, spanning January 2-3, 2026, reflects a polarized community: supporters of Unstoppable cite reliability and value, critics echo Kalin's compliance concerns, and experts clarify technical shifts like WHOIS to RDAP. The thread has over 12,900 views on the main post, indicating significant interest. For domainers, it emphasizes verifying registrar policies and monitoring ICANN updates.

The discourse also veers into AI reliability, with users mocking reliance on ChatGPT/Gemini for legal insights, and Grok providing fact-checks on Unstoppable's history (ICANN accreditation in 2024, lawsuits dismissed/won). This adds a layer of meta-commentary on information sources in industry debates.

Overall, while the dispute appears isolated, it amplifies calls for transparency in domain registration practices. Domain investors are advised to monitor their portfolios, disable privacy if desired, and stay informed on ICANN's RDAP transition.

Key Citations (references):
 
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As someone who was involved in the exchange in question, I have not come across a single person who agreed with Kalin, especially given the timing (his critique coming so quickly after Unstoppable caught him abusing their services, probably their transfer promos).

I have nothing against Kalin personally and don't know the specifics about how he abused the promos but gut feeling tells me (given how many domains Kalin owns, something like 275k?) he created a bunch of accounts so as to bypass the domain limitations for transfers. In my opinion, his approach was the worst possible choice (as all the other people in that discussion pointed out as well) and I would highly recommend communicating with Unstoppable to figure out a reasonable solution. In my experience with them, they have always been more than fair. And speaking of imperfections, I have never come across registrars that were so quick to implement suggestions made by users, including mine about things like their push system, their seller storefronts and so on.

Domaining is such a small industry and I hate seeing all this drama between colleagues. There are so few of us out there that we should stick together and help one another out, not this bs!

Have a great 2026 everyone and let's do our best to lift everyone up this year: less drama, more money! :)
 

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As someone who was involved in the exchange in question, I have not come across a single person who agreed with Kalin, especially given the timing (his critique coming so quickly after Unstoppable caught him abusing their services, probably their transfer promos).

I have nothing against Kalin personally and don't know the specifics about how he abused the promos but gut feeling tells me (given how many domains Kalin owns, something like 275k?) he created a bunch of accounts so as to bypass the domain limitations for transfers. In my opinion, his approach was the worst possible choice (as all the other people in that discussion pointed out as well) and I would highly recommend communicating with Unstoppable to figure out a reasonable solution. In my experience with them, they have always been more than fair. And speaking of imperfections, I have never come across registrars that were so quick to implement suggestions made by users, including mine about things like their push system, their seller storefronts and so on.

Domaining is such a small industry and I hate seeing all this drama between colleagues. There are so few of us out there that we should stick together and help one another out, not this bs!

Have a great 2026 everyone and let's do our best to lift everyone up this year: less drama, more money! :)

Hi Andrei,

Bringing up an "Abuse of promotions" is a strange thing when there is a whistleblow-like content.

Of course there were many people who abused the generousity of UD. And, I am sure they were ready for this.

The question is: is it true that the ownership is changed upon a transfer? .. or just the privacy was redacted by default (like NameCheap does)?

Of course, there are many domainers that don't want to have domain privacy - the feature that has killed tonnes of domain sales as the inexperienced buyers were unable to understand who is the owner and how to find him/her.

.. would love Kalin sharing some screenshots.. huhhh.. way too confusing.. + I like both sides.. and yes, Kalin in known for always saying = launch a promo and there will be people who will try to abuse it to the max.

===

Can anyone share few .com names that have been transferred over to UD so we can simply look what is what? Tx
 
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The thing is, even if the UD whois policy would be the worst in the world, it wouldn't constitute the basis for an ICANN complaint because whois ceased being an ICANN requirement about a year ago, as John Berryhill pointed out:


Plus, just like with other registrars, people can turn privacy off if they want to.
 

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The thing is, even if the UD whois policy would be the worst in the world, it wouldn't constitute the basis for an ICANN complaint because whois ceased being an ICANN requirement about a year ago, as John Berryhill pointed out:


Plus, just like with other registrars, people can turn privacy off if they want to.

Thank you. Though, i will try 1 more time the question (questions are often missed in long texts): is it true that the ownership is changed upon a transfer? .. or just the privacy was redacted by default (like NameCheap does)?

and, of course, I am on exactly the same page as you: less drama, more business :)

Happy Monday!
 
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Thank you. Though, i will try 1 more time the question (questions are often missed in long texts): is it true that the ownership is changed upon a transfer? .. or just the privacy was redacted by default (like NameCheap does)?

and, of course, I am on exactly the same page as you: less drama, more business :)

Happy Monday!

I think the main confusion stems from the text that appears as the registrant name when privacy is enabled, whether it's "Redacted for Privacy" or the name of the company that handles whois privacy... the existence of that doesn't nullify your ownership of the domain, it's not like Mr. "Redacted for Privacy" or Mrs. "Domain Privacy Company LLC" or whatever becomes the new owner :)

But again, if people are afraid of this, they can simply disable privacy and their name will once again appear as the registrant.
 
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