I hope you've read the rest of this thread; it makes our position clear on
this issue. The 'open renew anywhere' functionality will be disabled (I've
noticed an optional flag request earlier on the list; I supsect we'll solve
that RSPs problem in some other way)

Thanks,

Ken

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Dan Babb
> Sent: January 10, 2001 1:43 PM
> To: dnsadmin
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: RE: renewals + notification
>
>
>
> heh..
>
> if i had known this was how the procedure worked, i wouldn't have even
> signed up for this.  i don't reg many domains at my isp, we have maybe 200
> virt domains, so when we register it was always through NSI.  i converted
> to this because i liked the idea of being my own RSP and not having to
> deal with NSI.
>
> i thought that when a customer reg'd a domain, or anyone really using me
> as their RSP, i would have the renewal income on that domain till it was
> transfered away from me (in the sense of from opensrs to NSI, or one of a
> million others, yeah i know i didn't word it right =p), but if its working
> the way the below email states.  i recieve no notification, i have no idea
> what is happening, and i end up looking like a moron.
>
> i would never have signed up if this was how it was going to work, and i'm
> pretty disappointed that i'm 'stuck' now in this.
>
> i hope opensrs does something about this, or at least addresses the issue.
>
> - Dan
>
> On Tue, 9 Jan 2001, dnsadmin wrote:
>
> >
> > BTW, it is in OpenSRS's best interest to "not care" about which
> RSP actually
> > adds domain years to an expiring domain.
> >
> > A domain year from RSP A, B, or C usually costs the same ($10)
> -- so if you
> > get cheated out the deal, and I manage to renew your domains --
> OpenSRS gets
> > paid the same.
> >
> > For us, it sucks. For them, it's not important.
> >
>

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