- Impact
- 9,592
Why?Yes no registration data being shown anymore.
I have reached out for an explanation there is nothing on their site that was added under faq or news.Why?
Any explain ..
Whois also requires you to login: Changes being made without any announcements.
Why did the registration date data disappear from the whois?
Maybe because i am Armageddon ( no longer Dot.us )
& don't breach a ICANN rule/s ?Vince from .Ai got back to me, I asked him
We moved to a different machine but basically that info is for the owner of the domain and not the public.
Vincent Cate is the guy at .ai who handles things. I started looking into that whether a registration date is required. @jmcc do you know? Thank you& don't breach a ICANN rule/s ?
& who is Vince ( looks like a private person who own .ai ) like .tel...you own but not own a .ai domain 'we' can do what ever we want
& notice one of .ai domain want to reg. in 2023 ( summer ) now is on expired domains .ai this is not possible because you reg for 2 years
... looks more & more fishie .ai extension
...i bite .xyz now to bite .ai?
...i have 4 , maybe max. 2 or 3 to reg. but i dont think will be more
That’s an interesting choice from the registrar
Maybe I’m saying a stupid thing , but what if we see it in this way :
There has been many TM cases involving AI domains.
Maybe the choice of not showing registration data is related to this.
Not tracking .AI but it is a repurposed ccTLD and outside ICANN gTLD rules. Even the old gTLD WHOIS on port 43 system for the gTLDs is falling apart due to the vandalism of GDPR. The "moving to a different server" excuse makes sense given the interest in .AI ccTLD. Some ccTLDs, especially in Europe, return little or no data.Vincent Cate is the guy at .ai who handles things. I started looking into that whether a registration date is required. @jmcc do you know? Thank you
Technically, ccTLDs have their own rules but they don't generally take away domain names from registrants like that. It is bad for business.So is outside ICANN gTLD rules
What a ....
So if they want they can take out from a owner/s the domains without notice
I think i wll stay away from .ai ..not sure 100% but...
Technically, ccTLDs have their own rules but they don't generally take away domain names from registrants like that. It is bad for business.
There are some threads here about Covid related domain names being frozen by ccTLD registries (I think that one thead mentioned the .ES ccTLD). The ccTLDs are the ultimate "buyer beware" opportunity for domainers and it is important to read the terms and conditions before registering. Domain names being removed from registrants also happens in the gTLDs. Some of 4Ls and 5Ls were locked (I think they were shifted to the FBI holding nameservers rather than one of the sinkhole nameservers) because a reverse-engineered Domain Generation Algorithm (DGA) that had been used for some malware had them in the list. The registrants were completely innocent and the domain names were not used for malware. Even gTLD registries have to comply with Law Enforcement.
Regards...jmcc