> > With a 20-odd billion market cap, I'm sure they wouldn't really notice
too
> > much. *sigh...*
> >
> > Charles Daminato
> > TUCOWS Product Manager (ccTLDs)
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
>
> In which case they can afford to pay my invoices that I am going to
> start sending to their Accounts Payable Department.
> We charge $500 to process EACH set of bogus invoice/deactivation notices
> they
> send out for domains that were long transfered to SRS.
> There's letter opening time, admin overhead, billing research time etc.
> If they don't pay, I'll send it to collections.
>
>
> Tony
Is this legal in the US? I'm open to any suggestions (besides
illegal/unethical) that might help speed up the process of making NSI
correct their billing process.
It sounds like a bunch of crap to me that "Once the billing process is
started, it cannot be stopped". If they wish to claim to be the #1
registry, then why can't they afford to fix their billing system...
Many of our clients are corporate and pay by check. Even though it was
stated that you cannot pay an NSI invoice for a domain no longer in their
registry, I'm wondering if NSI would return the check, or happily deposit it
since their "billing system" seems to think they still control the domain.
After all, their "support personnel" are nothing more than droids who read
info from a computer screen, I'd assume the billing dept. is no different.
Brian Curtis
P.S. (I called NSI's automated payment phone # and it was more than eager to
accept my CC# to pay for the domain in reference to this thread.)