As I said: do you know how serious the offers are? Do you know why exactly weidai.com may be worth $100k?
I’m not sure what someone who wants to buy a domain name named after its current owner is thinking of doing with it, but I think there’s a non-negligible chance it’d turn out to be something the namesake of the domain name wouldn’t like at all.
I’d be somewhat worried about this if I were selling jefftk.com or something, but “wei” and “dai” without tones could mean many things. I don’t remember much of my Chinese, but looking at a dictionary I see:
Now, not all of these combinations will mean what they look like they might mean, but there are a lot of reasonable things “wei dai” could mean aside from a person’s name.
(It also looks like “wei dai” can mean “grave danger”.)
To expand on this, there are several thousand commonly used Chinese characters, each with different meanings. These map onto about 400 possible syllables (ignoring tone). However not all combinations of two Chinese characters are valid Chinese words. My Chinese input software gives three possibilities when I type in “wei dai”.
未带: not bring
微带: microstrip
危殆: grave danger
However new Chinese words are invented all the time, using combinations of existing Chinese characters. In this case I believe the highest bidders of my domain actually want to use it for 微贷, which means microloan.
I’m not sure what someone who wants to buy a domain name named after its current owner is thinking of doing with it, but I think there’s a non-negligible chance it’d turn out to be something the namesake of the domain name wouldn’t like at all.
‘Wei Dai’ is not that rare a name; there could easily be some Chinese businessmen or something who want the name for branding purposes.
I’d be somewhat worried about this if I were selling jefftk.com or something, but “wei” and “dai” without tones could mean many things. I don’t remember much of my Chinese, but looking at a dictionary I see:
Now, not all of these combinations will mean what they look like they might mean, but there are a lot of reasonable things “wei dai” could mean aside from a person’s name.
(It also looks like “wei dai” can mean “grave danger”.)
To expand on this, there are several thousand commonly used Chinese characters, each with different meanings. These map onto about 400 possible syllables (ignoring tone). However not all combinations of two Chinese characters are valid Chinese words. My Chinese input software gives three possibilities when I type in “wei dai”.
未带: not bring
微带: microstrip
危殆: grave danger
However new Chinese words are invented all the time, using combinations of existing Chinese characters. In this case I believe the highest bidders of my domain actually want to use it for 微贷, which means microloan.