SnapNames Gets Hit With Class-Action Suit

MIAMI — SnapNames.com on Monday was hit with a class-action suit after it was revealed Friday that a former top executive secretly bid on as many as 50,000 domain name auctions over the past four years.

The suit, which alleges that the domain name provider used shill bidders to manipulate auctions, was filed at Miami-Dade County Circuit Court on behalf of lead plaintiff Carlos A. Cueto and others who participated in online auctions for domain names.

Friday’s allegations made by officials at Oversee.net, which owns SnapNames and domain auctioneer, registrar and appraiser Moniker.com, now have turned into a suit, with others likely to come.

Attorney Santiago Cueto, who represents brother Carlos Cueto in the suit, claims that the suit is just “the tip of the iceberg in the domain-name industry” because the trade remains unregulated.

“The online community has been up in arms over what they feel has been an opaque system that just begs for transparency,” Santiago Cueto said. “It is impossible to know whether you are bidding against someone that isn’t working or affiliated with the company conducting the auction.”

SnapNames.com says that a former top executive secretly bid on as many as 50,000 domain name auctions over the past four years with the motive to drive up prices and enrich himself in the process.

Oversee said it learned about a month ago that the SnapNames executive had been bidding on its domain auctions in violation of company policy that bars employees from doing so.

The executive, who was one of the founding employees of the company and allegedly a vice president, ran up the bids with the motive to drive up prices and enrich himself in the process. He was later fired.

Oversee last week notified affected customers via email, stating that "in every auction where the employee's fictitious account submitted a bid which resulted in a higher price being paid by the winning bidder, SnapNames will offer a rebate, with 5.22 percent interest (the highest applicable federal rate during the affected time period), to affect customers for the difference between the prices they actually paid and the prices they would have paid, had the employee not bid in the auctions."

The message to customers said the bulk of the bidding occurred on auctions between 2005 and 2007, but that the executive’s bidding affected about 5 percent of total SnapNames auction since 2005.

Oversee also said the incremental value from the bidding represented approximately one percent of SnapNames' auction revenue during that same time.

Oversee alleges that the executive made the bids using an auction account set up under the alias "Hank Alvarez."

In certain cases where the executive won the domain name bid, he paid for the domain and then arranged to refund a portion of the winning bid amount to his account.

Attorney Santiago Cueto said as a result of the internal bidding, prices to purchase domain names were falsely inflated, leading to higher costs to buyers and greater profit for the defendants.

“Domain names are the last frontier for the average person to stake their claim on some very valuable property,” Santiago Cuetos said. “The defendants’ conduct has made it harder for people to do so and we intend to put a stop to this practice, which we perceive as being a major concern in the industry.”

Related:  

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

AEBN Publishes Popular Searches by Country for August, September

AEBN has released the list of popular searches from its straight and gay theaters by country in August and September.

AV in Focus: A Guide to Unlocking Compliance With Clarity

The age verification era isn’t coming — it’s here. Laws are already on the books in numerous U.S. states, as well as in the U.K., France and beyond.

Canadian Privacy Commissioner Endorses National AV Bill

Philippe Dufresne, privacy commissioner of Canada, has voiced support for a bill that would impose fines of up to $500,000 on adult sites that do not implement age verification for Canadian viewers.

Ricky Johnson Launches 'Ricky's Resort' Through YourPaysitePartner

Ricky's Room studio honcho Ricky Johnson has launched his latest site, RickysResort.com, through YourPaysitePartner (YPP).

Industry Attorney Paul Cambria Retires After 50 Years of Practicing Law

After more than a half-century in practice, during which he provided the defense in some of the adult industry's most notable legal cases, attorney Paul Cambria has retired.

2026 XMA Nominations Party Set for Nov. 19 in Hollywood

The 2026 XMA nominations reveal party will take place at Keys on the Sunset Strip on Wednesday, Nov. 19, with red-carpet arrivals starting at 8 p.m.

New VR Membership Site 'DeepInSex.com' Launches

The new 8K VR membership site DeepInSex has officially launched.

NATS Launches Integrated Content Management System

Too Much Media (TMM) has rolled out an integrated, no-charge Content Management System (CMS) to its NATS platform.

AEBN Reveals Avery Lust as Top Trans Star for Q3 of 2025

AEBN has published its top trans stars list for the third quarter of 2025, with Avery Lust landing atop the leaderboard.

FSC: California's Device-Based AV Law Does Not Apply to Adult

The Free Speech Coalition (FSC) put out an advisory today explaining that California's new device-based age verification law does not apply to adult websites.

Show More