Dynadot โ€” .com Registration $8.99

RegisterFly - Name Server Problems

Spacemail by SpaceshipSpacemail by Spaceship
Watch

birdman5

Established Member
Impact
0
I've got a few sites which are parked at Sedo. I changed the DNS to sedo's name servers, and some of them work.

However, others (notably my uk.com and .cc names) seem to switch back and forward from sedo's nameserver to my own, which i'd used initially.

My parking stats are all over the place because of this :(

Anyone else experienced this?
 
0
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Unstoppable DomainsUnstoppable Domains
birdman5 said:
I've got a few sites which are parked at Sedo. I changed the DNS to sedo's name servers, and some of them work.

However, others (notably my uk.com and .cc names) seem to switch back and forward from sedo's nameserver to my own, which i'd used initially.

My parking stats are all over the place because of this :(

Anyone else experienced this?

It sometimes takes 2-3 days for nameservers to propagate, and somtimes proxies will cache old date for up to several weeks. It could be that access from some computers is correct and others show old data.

Another slight possibility is that registerfly is pretty bad about maintaining domains in their database that have been transferred out. You may try to manage a domain there that isn't really there at all, but has been transferred to another registrar. It seems virtually impossible to get a name out of the registerfly management list that has been transferred to enom, since they are a resesller fore enom.

Those ccTLD names may be somehow controlled differently a well in regards to DNS records, but I've really never heard of it.
 
0
•••
Just like to say thanks to Regfly for sorting this out.

All nameserver issues resolved B-)

Note for anyone else - CentralNic changes seem to take a little longer than others...
 
0
•••
Domain Recover
DomainEasy โ€” Zero Commission
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the pageโ€™s height.
Back