Putting a middle-person in charge of a domain transaction can be beneficial, particularly when they know what they’re doing.
Experienced domain brokers at Sedo or SAW work hard for the benefit of their clients; whether they act as a buyer’s broker or as a seller’s broker, domain brokers follow ethics common with other professions, such as real estate brokers.
The domain owner of MicroCredentials.com doesn’t seem to like GoDaddy brokers, in particular, something that they make very clear through the domain landing page’s message:
“No GoDaddy Brokers allowed as they just steal your money.”

We don’t know what exact incident triggered the registrant of MicroCredentials.com to place this message alongside the domain’s asking price ($3,500 dollars.) Perhaps they had a personal experience that did not end well.
From our experience, GoDaddy’s brokerage team follows strict ethics rules regarding how they conduct business. Whether you like GoDaddy or not, brokers stealing money from the domain seller is not something that seems feasible.
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GoDaddy brokers are a damn joke. Absolutely ridiculous. I’ve never had people toy with me more than a GoDaddy broker that doesn’t know how to get a deal done because all they do is toy with lies for no apparent benefit to anyone.
Sam – I’ve mixed experiences myself but “stealing money” isn’t the accurate sentiment here.