| Tips on how to keep your domain name safe from theft |
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| Articles Reviews Domain Names | |
| Written by Larry Gomez | |
| Thursday, 15 March 2007 | |
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{mos_sb_discuss:43} If you want to register domain names online, you are required to do it through an authorized domain name registrar. This is an organization or company and it provides services for domain name registration for the public. To keep your domain name safe, you need to take some precautions.
Authorization for these services comes from the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or ICANN, an organization that concerns directly Internet governance. A registrar can also get an authorization from its government, in order to register names for domains within a specific country code Top Level Domain name extension, or ccTLD. The responsibility of a registrar is the creation and maintenance of a WHOIS database for its own customers. To register domain names may be a more difficult task to complete, but you can do it for sure. After the registration, there is still work to do in keeping that name safe. Numerous calls and emails made everyday concern companies who lose control or ownership of their domain names. The common problems that occur after you register domain names are due
to your own employees, third parties, vandals and others. There are
some helpful tips that can protect your domain name from these people.
However, the general recommendation is to avoid such situations. You
should never allow third parties to register your domain name without
instructions and oversight. You must control the information you send
to the registrar, in order to have any control over the name of your
domain. If there is another email address that is trying to modify
the information in your account, the registrar will not consider it
valid. You should not use the e-mail of an employee or partners for
registration, because in case of a difference of opinion and if that
person leaves the company, you are in trouble. To keep your name safe, you need to take some precaution. If the registrars receive a transfer request from a third party, they will send you a confirmation e-mail. If you fail to respond to that e-mail and the domain remains unlocked, the authorization for the transfer comes automatically. If you lock the domain, this will never happen. You should watch out for spam e-mails
that pose as your registrar and be very careful when you respond to any
information requests about your domain by mail or email. Ninety percent
of them are frauds. If you would lose the name of your domain, some might
have purchased the rights for the name of your domain in case it
expires. This happens because it has a built-in traffic and they can
use it for their own purposes. You can establish that
name as a trademark. The laws concerning domains concern directly the
trademark rights you have in using the words for naming your domain.
This will give you a substantial advantage for keeping the name of your
domain. Powered by jReviews |
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| Last Updated ( Saturday, 07 July 2007 ) | |
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