I got an email today which looks like one of those ICANN required verification emails that registrars have to send out to domain holders.
ICANN requires registrars to send a notice to verify whois information and “when a registrant does not respond for over 15 calendar days to a registrar’s inquiries regarding the accuracy of contact details or Whois data associated with the registration, the action can be to terminate or suspend the non-responsive registrant’s domain name, or to place a lock on the domain name registration until the registrar is able to validate information provided by the registrant.”
However, this email is coming from DomainVerification.net with the email address of [email protected], not the domain registrar the domain is registered with.
The domain name DomainVerification.net was just registered on December 31, 2015.
The email asks you to click on a link to say the whois info is Accurate or not accurate and no matter which you click on you go to the following site which is charging between $93.95 and $49.95 a year ($9.95 for a 501 c-3)
Source
ICANN requires registrars to send a notice to verify whois information and “when a registrant does not respond for over 15 calendar days to a registrar’s inquiries regarding the accuracy of contact details or Whois data associated with the registration, the action can be to terminate or suspend the non-responsive registrant’s domain name, or to place a lock on the domain name registration until the registrar is able to validate information provided by the registrant.”
However, this email is coming from DomainVerification.net with the email address of [email protected], not the domain registrar the domain is registered with.
The domain name DomainVerification.net was just registered on December 31, 2015.
The email asks you to click on a link to say the whois info is Accurate or not accurate and no matter which you click on you go to the following site which is charging between $93.95 and $49.95 a year ($9.95 for a 501 c-3)
Source