Never be afraid to try something new. Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic. Dave Barry
bigsleepj wrote: Unfinished stories never leave you, nor do they fester. They only grow better, like wine locked away in a deep dark cellar, waiting for you to bottle it and bring it to the light.
As you can see, on that page, GoDaddy is saying that if you don't pay them 4.99 extra every year you'll probably be exposed to SPAM and other possible inconveniences. YahooDomains has a very similar notice. As far as I know, GoDaddy is "THE" leading name in domain registration and Yahoo is, of course, a large and trusted corporation. I've seen the notice on most other Domain registration web sites I've visited as well.GoDaddy.com wrote:Did you know that when you register a domain [...] Your personal information is exposed 24 hours a day, everyday, to anyone, anywhere.
Protect yourself from spam, fraud, stalkers and worse by keeping your name, address, email and phone number private.
Make any Domain Name Private
$8.99/yr NOW JUST $4.99/yr!
When you register a domain much of your private information is placed on the Internet, making clear to everyone who the owner of a domain is and how to contact them. Spambots crawl the Internet, searching for information such as this, causing you to receive spam. To combat this, the registration companies now offer to make your domain private for you, this is a service and it is more trouble and work for registration companies, thus the charge. It is not unethical for a registration company to send you warnings that you're most likely receiving spam due to your private information being on the Internet due to your domain (which is legally required by default) and that you may upgrade to their private service where they keep your information private(which heavies their work load since this information is originally legally required to be on WHOIS).Angel37 wrote:Well considering the fact that the only way you'd GET spam is by registering or giving out your e-mail to stuid sites OR if register.com gave that information to spam companies, I'd say your need for spam protection isn't really needed. It's prolly just advertising but I am interested in what they reply to you. XD
Mostly correct, yes.Authority3000 wrote:Wait... I was under the impression that 'Private Domain Registration' was a service that protected and kept private your contact details (e.g. email address) from WHOIS.
That would surprise me. My primary sites are all with internic (or whatever they're called this month) and my secondaries (like CAA) with register. If Godaddy somehow became the biggest player in town, I didn't hear about it.As far as I know, GoDaddy is "THE" leading name in domain registration and Yahoo is, of course, a large and trusted corporation.
I'd have extreme difficulty thinking of this service as a protection racket, and more view it as a simple variance in the level of service quality based on how much effort you're paying a particular company to provide you.
:lol: I'm guessing you don't know that I'm a sysadmin for a living.I think you may have misunderstood the email Register.com sent you as them threatening to spam you rather then just the (ad like) notice that your domain had a public registration
I actually have a series of email aliases that I enable when I need to interact with the people I created the account for. The email (and snailmail) address on file with them is bogus, but I can turn it on if I need the email address for anything. (I have over 500 email addresses.) It just so happens I checked in the spam box that this address files to and found this.
Yeah, you're sure not the only one too, Register.com seems to be developing a rather bad reputation as of late due to its many unhappy customers.I was posting this because I thought people might find it humorous, but also because I wanted to go on record as being annoyed with it.
Mithrandir wrote:That would surprise me. My primary sites are all with internic (or whatever they're called this month) and my secondaries (like CAA) with register. If Godaddy somehow became the biggest player in town, I didn't hear about it.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:LONG LIVE THE DON!
I can see it now, the Godfather 4: INTERNET RACKETING!
You should email them saying "If you spam my domain, I will pay someone to email spam back to you!"
Zilch wrote:Are we gonna find a server motherboard next to us in bed when we wake up?
You should email them saying "If you spam my domain, I will pay someone to email spam back to you!"
Are you saying it's not normal to wake up next to computer hardware?
I'd like to also go on record saying a DEFINATELY would not like to see that!Myoti wrote:Pay? Shoot, if they did that us, they'd probably have the entirety of all 4,475 (current) users spamming them back. For free/fun.
Define "normal," and we'll go from there. =)
Mithrandir wrote:Are you saying it's not normal to wake up next to computer hardware?
Myoti wrote:Pay? Shoot, if they did that us, they'd probably have the entirety of all 4,475 (current) users spamming them back. For free/fun.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:I guess I'm certaintly not normal
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