On October 27, 2014 at 10:20 AM Alexander Burger wrote:
> Hi Jakob,
>
> our mails just crossed ;-)
>
> > "someone" registered that domain for PicoLisp, then did not renew the fee.
>
> Yes, javuchi messed it up somehow, but it may not be only his fault. It
> seems to be possible that domains are
Alexander Burger writes:
Hi Alex,
> I think the above site is evil.
so the message to take home is that evilness might come along with a
pretty attractive appearance ...
--
cheers,
Thorsten
--
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Hi Jakob,
our mails just crossed ;-)
> "someone" registered that domain for PicoLisp, then did not renew the fee.
Yes, javuchi messed it up somehow, but it may not be only his fault. It
seems to be possible that domains are stolen during transfers even if
all fees were properly handled.
We had
Jakob Eriksson writes:
> "someone" registered that domain for PicoLisp, then did not renew the fee.
>
> When it was expired, the domain was snatched (like most expired
> domains are)
> by one of these companies which do nothing else but buy expired domains and
> resell them.
>
> The boilerplate t
Hi Thorsten,
> have you seen this website:
>
> ,
> | http://www.picolisp.org/
> `
>
> Its a nice looking website, but I cannot see no connection to PicoLisp
Yes, I was wondering too. I've seen that quite some time ago.
A few years back, the domain picolisp.org was stolen at the very m
"someone" registered that domain for PicoLisp, then did not renew the fee.
When it was expired, the domain was snatched (like most expired domains are)
by one of these companies which do nothing else but buy expired domains and
resell them.
The boilerplate text is just random junk to keep the pag