All this talk of deceptive renewals is funny... because since the talk started I have had in the area of 50 of my domains come up for renewal and I have recieved no deceptive emails for any of them... james Fiander jfiander§nimblehost.com -----Original Message----- From: AUSCITY [mailto:auscity§auscity.com.au] Sent: Friday, April 19, 2002 9:38 AM To: dns§lists.auda.org.au Subject: [DNS] Sneaky Domain Renewal Notices I received the following email from our own .com/.net/.org Registrar based in the US this morning. Interesting reading ......... Warning! Be Careful with Sneaky Domain Renewal Notices A number of customers have reported to directNIC that their domains disappeared from their directNIC account after they responded to renewal notices by snail mail. It turns out that they actually transferred the domain to another registrar who had sent them a renewal notice by mail and urged them to renew the domain immediately. Without knowing that these notices were not from directNIC, these unsuspecting users transferred their domains away from directNIC, paid a much higher price, lost their virtual domains, erased their email forwarding rules and POP3 accounts, and consequently took their websites offline. To see several of these deceptive expiration notices, visit http://notice.reference.directnic.com For the record, directNIC relies almost solely on email to contact customers and does not solicit business through the U.S. mail. If you receive notices in the mail regarding renewing your directNIC-registered domain names, be sure to read them carefully and consult with directNIC before you make any decisions. Several registrars are mining WHOIS data and sending deceptive and predatory expiration notices to owners of domains that are not registered with them. They have one common purpose: To steal domains from their competitors without lowering their price or improving their service and products. A few that have participated in this practice include Domain Registry of America, Network Solutions and Register.com, among others. We believe competition should be fair, legal, and ethical. directNIC has attracted many customers by constantly improving its website and user interface, adding new services, launching new products, listening and responding to customer feedback, and protecting customers against hackers and unethical solicitors. In order to better protect your domains and our business, we invite you to join our efforts. If you have received the mentioned paper-based renewal notices from other registrars, please report this activity to ICANN, the governing body of the domain registration industry. The link to file a complaint is http://www.internic.net/cgi/registrars/problem-report.cgi Sincerely, directNIC.com For Your Information: 1. Advisory Concerning Deceptive Notices from "XChange Dispute Resolution" ICANN has received reports of domain-name registrants receiving "Domain Dispute Notification" mailings from an entity identifying itself as "Xchange Dispute Resolution." The mailings falsely state that XChange is an "ICANN authorized arbitrator" and that the registrant must mail in a "security deposit fee" to defend "ownership of the domain name." The link to the article is http://www.icann.org/announcements/advisory-08apr02.htm 2. Violation to the Federal Mail Guidelines: The official USPS regulations for mail "that reasonably could be considered a bill, invoice, or statement of account due, but is in fact a solicitation for an order": http://pe.usps.gov/text/dmm/c031.htm The requirement is that the following phrase must appear in at least thirty point capital letters on the face of the notice: "THIS IS NOT A BILL. THIS IS A SOLICITATION. YOU ARE UNDER NO OBLIGATION TO PAY THE AMOUNT STATED ABOVE UNLESS YOU ACCEPT THIS OFFER." Here is a helpful example picture of what it should look like: http://pe.usps.gov/text/dmm/c031.htm#Rar16021 The VeriSign messages clearly violate this requirement, and come under the mail fraud category. You can complain to your local Postal Inspectors, or file your complaint online at: http://www.usps.com/websites/depart/inspect/fraud/MailFraudComplaint.htm Regards, Chas Cleland Any views expressed are those of the author and not necessarily representative of Metropolis CBD Pty Ltd or its subsidiaries AUSCITY.COM and BusinessProfiles - Auscity.Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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