Hi everyone,
Owning your own domain name and website is a great step to take for online business, and can be very rewarding and fun.
However, you need to be very careful about who you register with, who you host with, and about keeping careful hard (printed) records.
At this moment in time, I'm in a situation that is entirely my fault. I should have paid more attention to details back in 2003 and again in 2005.
Here's what happened. In 2003, I registered a domain name and parked it, as I had no real use for it at the time.
In 2005, I acquired hosting for the domain with a company I've used for years. Since that time, I've renewed the domain several times through my hosting company, and have assumed that the domain is registered through my hosting company, since that is where I renew it.
A few days ago, when I went to renew my domain and hosting once again, imagine my shock when I discovered I could not renew it! Apparently the original registrar I used is STILL the registrar of record, and they have put a lock on the domain, meaning I can't renew it, change any information on it or anything other than simply using the domain, and that, too, will disappear once it expires.
At this point in time, I'm trying to contact the registrar, but have so far only received a polite email informing me that I need to contact one of their resellers who is the one who is actually in charge of the registration. So far, I have not had any success, but do hope that this will be resolved shortly, as the company in question is a large, reputable company.
However, there still looms the sad possibility that I could lose this domain name AND website, and all the work done to bring it up in the ranks of visibility in the online world.
I could have avoided all this by paying more attention to detail. I SHOULD have carefully examined the whois record for my domain at least yearly. I should be able to find my original record from 2003 easily. I should have updated the email address associated with the registration, since the address they have is an old one that no longer exists. Furthermore, I should have been absolutely certain to confirm who the registrar of record was and made sure that I could contact them and they could contact me.
Instead, I assumed that everything was changed over when I changed hosts and renewed through my host. Such an assumption may, possibly, have cost me a domain that I particularly want to keep. Time will tell.
In closing, let this be an important reminder to do your due diligence, know who you are working with, and even more importantly, know who it is that you are planning to work with. Keep meticulous records in printed form for anything that is important to you. One day you may need them for proof of, say, ownership of a domain.
God bless,
Dave
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