My website expired and then godaddy registered it??
-
@negative12dollarbill I don’t see an option to buy it just an option to get a “broker” to do it
@esther_alter That can't be good. Contact name.com customer support is what I would do. Clearly some business process went very wrong.
-
@esther_alter That can't be good. Contact name.com customer support is what I would do. Clearly some business process went very wrong.
@negative12dollarbill fuck. Ok, thanks
-
@esther_alter FUCK GODADDY.
I've never been in this situation before, but depending on the exact status:
* If your registrar was GoDaddy, it might be parked while in a grace period
* If it's completely expired, GoDaddy might have bought it, in which case you have to buy it back from them. And unfortunately, they get to dictate price@astraluma @esther_alter fuck godaddy indeed.
-
@astraluma how would I buy it back? I only see an option for a “broker”
@esther_alter @astraluma curious as to where you see a broker option.
The domain is indeed owned by godaddy and the registry was updated earlier this month, it’s plausible that you let the domain lapse without realizing it. godaddy is the scum of domain registrars, they watch domain lists so they can buy them immediately when they go up for registration again and then try to sell it back at wildly inflated rates.
-
@esther_alter @astraluma curious as to where you see a broker option.
The domain is indeed owned by godaddy and the registry was updated earlier this month, it’s plausible that you let the domain lapse without realizing it. godaddy is the scum of domain registrars, they watch domain lists so they can buy them immediately when they go up for registration again and then try to sell it back at wildly inflated rates.
@natecox @astraluma how would i buy it back?
-
@natecox @astraluma how would i buy it back?
@esther_alter godaddy runs a service called “DNS broker”, which is explicitly for buying domains “already registered” (in this case, and probably most or all cases, owned by them). They want you to go there and ask to buy it back.
-
@esther_alter godaddy runs a service called “DNS broker”, which is explicitly for buying domains “already registered” (in this case, and probably most or all cases, owned by them). They want you to go there and ask to buy it back.
@natecox ugh ok that was the only option I saw. I was hoping for something else. Should I expect to pay a “broker fee” plus an inflated price?
-
@natecox ugh ok that was the only option I saw. I was hoping for something else. Should I expect to pay a “broker fee” plus an inflated price?
@esther_alter yes.
Godaddy is like the DNS mafia. They should be shut down for market manipulation.
Fuck godaddy.
-
@natecox ugh ok that was the only option I saw. I was hoping for something else. Should I expect to pay a “broker fee” plus an inflated price?
@esther_alter @natecox the grace period for a .com is 30 days..then it should have a 30 day redemption period. (Where only you can re-register, but often at a higher price) are you saying you let it go for 60+ days?
If that's not the case you might have a bigger complaint on your hands
-
@esther_alter @natecox the grace period for a .com is 30 days..then it should have a 30 day redemption period. (Where only you can re-register, but often at a higher price) are you saying you let it go for 60+ days?
If that's not the case you might have a bigger complaint on your hands
@ahasty @esther_alter grace period isn’t a constant across registrars, I’ve used one or two across the years that both wouldn’t send renewal emails and gave no grace period. I think name.com may only be five days.
name.com has also been accused of domain tasting before. Wouldn’t surprise me if they aren’t going out of their way to protect their customers.
-
@ahasty @esther_alter grace period isn’t a constant across registrars, I’ve used one or two across the years that both wouldn’t send renewal emails and gave no grace period. I think name.com may only be five days.
name.com has also been accused of domain tasting before. Wouldn’t surprise me if they aren’t going out of their way to protect their customers.
-
@esther_alter @natecox I do find it odd that the domain appears to be still pointed to Name.com DNS. While registered with godaddy....at least.from what I looked at on my phone.
This is not a serious company???
-
@esther_alter @natecox I do find it odd that the domain appears to be still pointed to Name.com DNS. While registered with godaddy....at least.from what I looked at on my phone.
This is not a serious company???
-
@esther_alter @natecox they have a recover expired domain faq but if that doesn't work...you might have to buy it from the scalpers
This is my registrar
-
@esther_alter @natecox they have a recover expired domain faq but if that doesn't work...you might have to buy it from the scalpers
This is my registrar
-
-
@esther_alter This is horrible, but in case it hadn't occurred to you you can buy a new domain and hook it up to your website really simply. Just grab subalterngames.net or something. That will let you have a website while you get this sorted out.
-
@esther_alter This is horrible, but in case it hadn't occurred to you you can buy a new domain and hook it up to your website really simply. Just grab subalterngames.net or something. That will let you have a website while you get this sorted out.
@negative12dollarbill the problem is the variety of sites that point back to the old name. I was actually planning on getting a new domain and making subalterngames redirect to it. It’s just gross and awful. I’ve had that site since 2012
-
@negative12dollarbill the problem is the variety of sites that point back to the old name. I was actually planning on getting a new domain and making subalterngames redirect to it. It’s just gross and awful. I’ve had that site since 2012
@esther_alter did you contact name.com support?
-
@esther_alter did you contact name.com support?
@negative12dollarbill no but if sounds like that’s the first step. I’m going to bed now and I’ll do it in the morning. Thanks you and everyone else for the advice
