On its website, Name.com offers a wide range of products and services to help individuals and businesses build and maintain a successful online presence.
The company sells DNS domains, web hosting, email services, SSL certificates, and other website products.
[7] Name.com regularly hosts a hackathon called Hack the Dot, where developers, marketers, and creatives come together to create quick-fire projects within a two-hour timeframe based on a mystery domain name which is revealed at the time of the event.
These classes were offered over the course of a year in multiple cities across the U.S. including Denver, Boulder, San Francisco, Seattle, and Austin.
[14] Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman claimed that the registrars were taking advantage of their special status with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), to secure misspelled domains during the five-day grace period and paying only for the ones with valuable revenue.
The word was coined by employee Jared Ewy and the original likeness was made by Owen Borseth using various images from the internet.
Organizations in the Denver-metro area that have been awarded financial contributions in the past include SafeHouse Denver, the Special Olympics Denver Swim Team, Metro Caring, Rangeview High School Track and Field, and the Northfield High School Solar Rollers.
[22] The company has supported several non-profits, including a small literary magazine in South Africa, Amazwi, and a local environmental organization, Environment Colorado.
Many of the charities featured are small, grassroots efforts, though Susan G. Komen and Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) are also listed on the company's sponsorship page.
[23] Though the project appears to be at a standstill, Name.com worked briefly on a system of maps for laptop.org,[24] and offered to guide interns in their Denver office.