That was the context of the message.  However the concern
expressed told the bottom of the message was how to prevent
this from happening to their domains.

Since it was posted to an OpenSRS discussion list, it is
reasonable to assume that the concern was for domains
registered with OpenSRS, not with domains registered
elsewhere.

OpenSRS would have no control over domains registered else
where being hijacked as long as the admin contact of domains
transferred into OpenSRS responded to the OpenSRS email
concerning the transfer.

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 12:38 PM
> To: easygoing
> Cc: Ross Wm. Rader; Stewart Boutcher; OpenSRS Discuss List
> Subject: RE: How do we stop Hijackers (among us)?
>
>
>
> > I believe the concern expressed was domain
> being transferred
> > away from OpenSRS without the admin contact
> being aware of
> > the transfer.
>
> Actually it was a domain transferred to OpenSRS
> after the hijacker forged
> a fax to NSI and got the admin e-mail address
> changed at NSI.
>
> (the forged fax is just an educated guess since
> that is a common hijacker
> practice these days)
>
>
>

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