Forums
New posts
New posts
Search forums
Market
Domains/Websites Wanted
.com Domain Market
gTLD Domain Market
ccTLD Domain Market
Web3 Domain Market
Third-Level Domain Market
Adult Domain Market
What's New
New profile posts
Latest activity
Members
Current visitors
New profile posts
Search profile posts
Account Upgrade
Premium Members Directory
Log in
Register
What's New
calendar
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Enjoy unlimited access to all forum features for FREE! Optional upgrade available for extra perks.
Forums
Domain Discussion
Domain Name Legal Issues
Directnic Stole My Domain??
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="CJConrad" data-source="post: 2230138" data-attributes="member: 322883837"><p>Hi Jack,</p><p>Thanks for the quick response. I placed the question marks in the headline because I don't really know who is responsible. Yes, I don't think they "stole" it in the traditional sense (e.g. to take something of value from me to gain material benefit for themselves), but "stole" in the sense that they took something from me in which they had no right. And to not communicate with me in the process is, at minimum, extremely unprofessional. Perhaps it was an error on their part, in which case they need to fix it or otherwise accept responsibility to make it right w.r.t. me.</p><p></p><p>I didn't include my subsequent conversation with NameJet, but they have completely distanced themselves from this, saying that it is technically *impossible* for them to conclude the auction without the domain truly now belonging to the winner. They completely blame DirectNic and refuse to participate in a three-way call to get all the facts on the table. They will not discuss it further thus far, though a ticket has been opened.</p><p></p><p>So, I am currently left with each side completely blaming the other, telling me that they take no responsibility, and refusing any further assistance. They both win and I am out the auction costs.</p><p></p><p>If I've understood your post correctly, you seem to say that if they transferred it out by mistake, the resolution will be a refund of my auction fee? Perhaps life isn't fair, but that absolutely does not seem right nor just nor even legal. Is it possible to get confirmation of contact and name server changes for a domain I don't own (as I indeed did receive)? If it *was* mine at the time they transferred it (whether I'd owned it for hours or days) out to anyone, prior owner or not, then they "sold" (or gave) something that was not theirs to give. That's not legal in any life scenario that I can think of.</p><p></p><p>Thank you ...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CJConrad, post: 2230138, member: 322883837"] Hi Jack, Thanks for the quick response. I placed the question marks in the headline because I don't really know who is responsible. Yes, I don't think they "stole" it in the traditional sense (e.g. to take something of value from me to gain material benefit for themselves), but "stole" in the sense that they took something from me in which they had no right. And to not communicate with me in the process is, at minimum, extremely unprofessional. Perhaps it was an error on their part, in which case they need to fix it or otherwise accept responsibility to make it right w.r.t. me. I didn't include my subsequent conversation with NameJet, but they have completely distanced themselves from this, saying that it is technically *impossible* for them to conclude the auction without the domain truly now belonging to the winner. They completely blame DirectNic and refuse to participate in a three-way call to get all the facts on the table. They will not discuss it further thus far, though a ticket has been opened. So, I am currently left with each side completely blaming the other, telling me that they take no responsibility, and refusing any further assistance. They both win and I am out the auction costs. If I've understood your post correctly, you seem to say that if they transferred it out by mistake, the resolution will be a refund of my auction fee? Perhaps life isn't fair, but that absolutely does not seem right nor just nor even legal. Is it possible to get confirmation of contact and name server changes for a domain I don't own (as I indeed did receive)? If it *was* mine at the time they transferred it (whether I'd owned it for hours or days) out to anyone, prior owner or not, then they "sold" (or gave) something that was not theirs to give. That's not legal in any life scenario that I can think of. Thank you ... [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Forums
Domain Discussion
Domain Name Legal Issues
Directnic Stole My Domain??
Top
Bottom