Right, but the domain never "dropped".jdk said:I am assuming he means someone steals a domain from another person and pushes that domain to another NSI account leaving it at the same registrar. Then time goes by and the name lapses instead of renewing it and is auctioned off at Snapnames.
So technically the person who purchased the name from Snapnames bought a stolen name that expired. Not sure what could be done. Didn't the person who had the name stolen from them realize they didn't have the name anymore?
I will leave the legal explanation to the professionals here![]()
What?If you take cranberries and stew them like applesauce they taste much more like prunes than rhubarb does.
Steen said:If you take cranberries and stew them like applesauce they taste much more like prunes than rhubarb does.
What?
Steen said:Ok John,
The point I was trying to make is, does the domain have a clear title? It didn't really drop...
Here's an example if you don't understand the concept.
e.com is registered to E Inc via NSI. John Doe transfers e.com to his account at NSI. Mr Doe is concerned about being caught, so he does not renew the domain name when the registration period ends. NSI and Snapnames then auction the domain off to the highest bidder. Sally Victim ends up owning e.com because she was the highest bidder at Snapnames. Is e.com still a "stolen" domain or is Sally the new proud and legitimate owner?
Thoughts?
yesRADiSTAR said:If a tree falls and no one's around, does it make a noise?
Steen said:
davezan1 said:But if no one's around, no one will hear it, of course.
It's one thing for an object to make noise. It's another for someone else to
take notice. :wink:
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