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Comments on ‘Domain name gaffe launches Clearswift clients into e-mail panic’Mission critical app in critical conditionPublished Wednesday 23rd January 2008 20:09 GMT
"pursuing serious damages for breach of contract "By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 23rd January 2008 20:23 GMT
Good luck getting that one past your Legal department, sunshine. If you manage it, I can give you Microsoft's telephone number, whose products and services have been causing "direct business disruption" for years, but afaik no one has successfully sued them yet, most folks even abandon hope of getting a refund for the MS products which are Defective By Design. Trusting someone else with e-mail?!By plastical
Posted Wednesday 23rd January 2008 20:23 GMT
Whichever companies trust ONE server from ONE company to handle ALL of their e-mail have no sense at all, and deserve to be closed down on the spot. If you are that stupid, you should be nowhere near a computer, let alone the Internet - and let alone e-mail! (Eye twitches at the 90% of users that really ARE that stupid) Paris icon - they are about as stupid as her, anyway. LOL...By Brent Gardner
Posted Wednesday 23rd January 2008 21:13 GMT
The "time to renew your domain name" email probably got filtered as spam :-D Did I miss something?By Aubry Thonon
Posted Wednesday 23rd January 2008 23:34 GMT
"this whois record shows it expired on Dec. 13, suggesting someone forgot to renew its registration. Naughty, naughty." I have several domain names registered (I have a few hobbies - anime, dollfies, etc - and these DN all point to the one machine serving various web-sites for said hobbies) and the registrar I use allows me to tick a "automatic registration" box for each of these domains. And just to make sure I don't forget about them, it still sends me a reminder every year that domains X, Y and Z are about to re-register. So why is this sh*t still happening? Re: Did I miss something?By Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 24th January 2008 08:34 GMT
I get your point, but where I work none of the directors who bought the original domains are still here and the reminder emails still go to them. This bites us every year and nobody has got this sorted yet... <bangs head against wall /> @ACBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 24th January 2008 09:51 GMT
Stop banging your head against the wall and update your DNS administrative contacts to someone who is there. Re: Did I miss something?By Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 24th January 2008 11:11 GMT
Yes I relied on auto renewals too. nearly lost a domain because the domain registrar had the wrong date for some reason in their database compared to the actual registrar. Even then there have been lots of documented cases of auto renewals not working, you are still relying on one companies system to do the job, if it fails for any reason you are screwed, and relying on emails getting through from a registrar is also flawed as its easy for them to suddenly get eaten by a spam filter and has been seen to fail numerous times as documented on the reg from time to time. My answer - all domains with one registrar, auto renewals on and I log on once every six months or so and renew anything which is going to expire within the next few months and I keep an eye on the renewal dates (especially when I do transfers as that appears to be where the dates can go wrong). End of the day things go wrong. What is wrong here is the design of the system such that it had a single point of failure and lack of monitoring of their domains. Re: Did I miss something?By Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 24th January 2008 11:15 GMT
Instead of banging your head on the wall, stick a reminder in your diary system. Pretty simple and effective. Or even keep a list of all your domain in a speadsheet with their renewal dates. Make it a job to check them every few months and renew anything due to expire in the next 6 months for as long as possible. stop making excuses - start doing The period for commenting on this story has finished
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