Hi guys,
Sorry for cross-posting (again). But this email should tie up and close
this thread. Just spoke with the client and it seems that she originally
disputed the charge and Register.com took ownership. She apologised
profusely.
My personal apologies for jumping the gun, though I must say this is the
first time I've seen a registrar take over a domain like this. Kinda scary
to think that Network Solutions might have better business practices then
register.com. *ouch* Where is "the customer is always right"?
Alex
Charles Daminato writes:
> It's quite possible that the domain was in arrears and Register.com took
> ownership of the domain.
>
> My apologies for cross-posting - I just wanted to ask everyone to not
> crosspost back (myself included).
>
> Charles Daminato
> OpenSRS Support Manager
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> On Tue, 8 Aug 2000 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> >
> > Hi All,
> >
> > I'm in a qualm about this. So I'm cross posting 2 lists. I have a user
> > who owns the domain v-ro.com. She had problems with register.com, and
> > decided to transfer it to opensrs.org.
> > Before she did the transfer, I did a WHOIS on the domain and saw that it
> > was in her name and everything was cool. Now, I did a WHOIS today, and the
> > information shows REGISTER.COM for everything, including a fake phone
> > number.
> > What's going on? this looks like fraud...
> >
> > Alexey Zilber
> > DAYAK
> > Need to register or transfer a domain?
> > www.dayak.com charges only $15/year.
> > 40 megs of hosting space? $10!
> >
>
Alexey Zilber
DAYAK
Need to register or transfer a domain?
www.dayak.com charges only $15/year.
40 megs of hosting space? $10!