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Hello NamePros community! We are creating a single thread where we can share announcements in, talk about product updates, people can ask questions and host a great discussion on all things domains!


The SAV Reviews on TLD-List.com are even worse, with a score of 2.1 out of 5, based on 47 reviews.yeah, but the "static" claim next to the rating is now simply false:
That's pretty disturbing.As I mentioned here, anyone using SAV should know that if you use SAV, you’re probably not the only one with access to your domain’s functions; previous owners likely still have access too.
We look forward to engaging more frequently on here as well!Sav.com has just fixed a serious bug in their systems.
This bug has been brought to Sav's attention in various ways by other customers in the past, but it wasn't until today that Sav took action, in response to another thread on this forum in which Sav and CleanDNS are being actively discussed.
Let's hope this will be the start of a more proactive approach securing Sav's registrar systems, and keeping the Internet clean from abuse, because Sav is currently scoring poorly in this regard.
It would be recommended that Sav took a more active approach listening to their valued customers. Not only here on this forum, but also on X, other social media, and when customers contact Support directly.
Active participation again in this Sav Official Thread on NamePros could be a start to getting things back on track.
Thanks for fixing the bug today!
We look forward to engaging more frequently on here as well!
Hello NamePros community! We are creating a single thread where we can share announcements in, talk about product updates, people can ask questions and host a great discussion on all things domains!
.COM Hand Reg Prices on Sept 1: As of right now, we are not going to increase the price and will keep it the same at $7.99! That may change if registration volume drastically changes from where it is currently though.
What is your Sav account email address and what are the 4 domain names?@Nick R @Sav.com
Today I noticed 4 domains are missing from my account.
Just 4 random domains, out of the 10,000+ I currently maintain in SAV.
They still seem to be registered in SAV but they are not in my account.
Each of them uses different NS:
ns1-auction.sav.com,ns2-auction.sav.com
augustus.ns.cloudflare.com,laura.ns.cloudflare.com
jm1.dns.com,jm2.dns.com
ns1.dan.com,ns2.dan.com
I contacted support some hours ago, but they were very busy...
The escalated my issue to the developer team...
Now I have 10 open tickets! (some of them 2 months old)
Do I win something?
10.29Excellent news! And what will your renewal price for .com be after the ICANN increase in Sept?
Thanks for your LAST post @Nick RHello All. It seems like we are covering some of the same topics on both thread and our Official thread. I don’t think there is anything new I can share regarding abuse, nameserver changes regarding abuse, expired auctions, our relationship with CleanDNS. Let me answer a few posts from overnight then let's wrap this thread up and continue in here https://www.namepros.com/threads/sav-official-thread.1202323/
@ryan87 – We have gone back and forth on publishing a hard standard of when we move from a domain-level suspension to an account but there are different thresholds where we would take action depending on the domain and the complaint. Take an account that has 2 domains, both CSAM and we get a verified CSAM complaint for 1 of the domains. If we believe the second domain will be used for CSAM as well, we will not hesitate to disable it as well. However, if we are talking about an account with 2 domain names, 1 is used for phishing and one isn’t, we will only disable the phishing domain. We do reach out to all registrants about abuse complaints, regardless of the nature of the complaint. As I have said multiple times before, we would love for this to be moved out of the registrar’s hands and into an independent body overseen by ICANN.
@zotix – Thank you for your business! Regarding data sharing, please see one of my previous posts regarding this. I can tell you that not even Sav has your payment information. Its sent straight to our payment processor, tokenized, and referenced by that token moving forward. No accounts are banned without some communication from us first, we are just going to expand that communication to make it clearer that an account is reaching a number of abuse complaints where if it should continue, we will disable the entire account.
@Future Sensors – Some registries do take an active role in disabling abusive domains, and some rely on the registrar. The registry's actions always supersede ours and we always welcome abuse mitigation from a registry level.
Question 1 – Being a low-cost registrar is usually great, but it does attract a higher level of abuse as well. If you are going to use a domain for abuse, you are going to want to get the best deal on it.
Question 2 – See my long post from yesterday; it covers what we are going to do differently. Regarding estimating the impact – yes, we did. Due to Question 1 above, we did want to make a one-time purge to disable to bad actors who were found to have repeated domain abuse AND ignored our messages to them to try to resolve the abuse. We just should have communicated our actions more clearly and given a last warning.
This will be my LAST post in this thread. We can continue the conversation over in our Official. See you all there.
We have gone back and forth on publishing a hard standard of when we move from a domain-level suspension to an account but there are different thresholds where we would take action depending on the domain and the complaint. Take an account that has 2 domains, both CSAM and we get a verified CSAM complaint for 1 of the domains. If we believe the second domain will be used for CSAM as well, we will not hesitate to disable it as well. However, if we are talking about an account with 2 domain names, 1 is used for phishing and one isn’t, we will only disable the phishing domain. We do reach out to all registrants about abuse complaints, regardless of the nature of the complaint. As I have said multiple times before, we would love for this to be moved out of the registrar’s hands and into an independent body overseen by ICANN.
Sorry, this is far too simplistic. Domain abuse can also occur after a hack has occurred. DNS abuse encompasses a wide range of different types of abuse.I suspect most of the domains being used for abuse aren't valuable anyway, so maybe it makes more sense to let those drop straight back to the registry.