irishmat said:
the domain is still technically yours so you can still renew it if you want it
What rights you have are listed in your registrar's service agreement. Anything
else is fantasy.
If you want to make some of those fantasies become reality, then send all and
any comments you have to the powers-that-be. Don't expect them to become
magically in place just like that, though.
dre said:
Yeah "GoDaddy", they just took one of my domain, they didnt let the domain expire for it to go back into the process of being backordered.
Just look at the facts
Created: 2005-08-07
Expires: 2007-08-07
The domain NEVER expired, one year was just added on to it! and it looks like they still own the domain,
Domain servers in listed order:
CPNS01.SECURESERVER.NET
CPNS02.SECURESERVER.NET
And at the bottom of the page I see "This page is provided courtesy of GoDaddy.com", looks like they just took the domain!
When a domain name expires, the Verisign COM NET Registry autorenews it for
1 year and bills the sponsoring registrar accordingly for it. The registrar has up
to 45 days to try to secure renewal payment from its registrant or request for
its deletion and refund.
It's the registrar's business decision to offer a shorter or longer grace period. I
noticed that those who charge low tend to give a shorter one, and those who
charge high are more able to stretch things to the limit.
Now some of you might say, "all domain registrars must give 45 day grace for
registrants to renew their names!" or "all domain registrars must not auction
the expired name and just let them go!". I kinda like those ideas too, but you
have to realize there are different and even potentially conflicting interests at
play here as well.
What some of you don't realize is that many registrars nowadays hardly make
money out of domain names anymore. They try to make up for it in whatever
ways they can: charge admin fees, auction expired names within a period of
time, offer complementary services, etc., and they're within their rights to do
so subject to their contracts with their "upstream providers" and the laws of
the areas they do business in.
While we registrants are the ones paying to put them in business, they're the
ones who are paying the costs of being able to offer such in the first place. If
you put yourselves in their shoes, you might then understand what it is like
being on the other side of the fence.
In the meantime, make sure to renew your domain names
on time. If you don't
agree with your registrar's policies, then transfer elsewhere.