Dynadot โ€” .com Transfer

poll Which registrar do you feel safest with?

SpaceshipSpaceship
Watch

Which registrar do you feel safest with?


equity78

Top Member
:heavy_check_mark: TheDomains.com
:heavy_check_mark: TLDInvestors.com
Impact
32,415
Forget favorite or best overall, which registrar would be your pick from a safety standpoint.

Things like

Their security
Financial position
Free speech and how they work with government agencies
Have true privacy protection that they won't easily allowed penetrated
Redemption periods
Getting paid or refunds

etc...




All registrar polls: https://www.namepros.com/threads/namepros-community-polls.1345017/
 
Last edited by a moderator:
11
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
AfternicAfternic
I prefer a balance sheet of a publicly traded company.
That is a verifiable, public record. That is something you don't get out of a privately held company.

Brad

Fair point but IMO not strictly necessary if the private owner(s) are trustworthy.
 
1
•••
Uniregistry
 
3
•••
Have been forced to moved several times due to Icann closing registrars doing wrong thing. Godaddy is the most solid.
 
3
•••
Another point here, worth investigation by someone who has the time and interest to look into it and write it up: How secure your domain is from cancellation by the registrar?

A few years back someone did that comparison and the registrar whose ToS gave the least scope for cancelling your domain was... yes... Moniker. Security lapses and changes of ownership there since then may have changed that.

Godaddy ToS give a very broad scope for cancelling your domain.

If you are looking at Whois privacy, again you have the question, under what circumstances will the registrar lift that? Are there known cases of them doing that?
 
4
•••
I mean if you got the funds you could buy an accredited registrar or apply for ICANN accreditation yourself.

For those if us for whom that's not financially feasible... I'd say first choice is Epik free privacy, protects free speech even if its unpopular and I can always reach Rob if I need to, not many companies you can say that about. Certainly not any other registrar who's CEO is so accessible.

Number 2 I'd say Cloudflare also with the privacy they protect free speech with some limits (the kicked 8chan off their network) and they have the security pedigree to back it all up. Though that said their registrar capabilities still leave alot to be desired, but this pills not about that its about Security and that's one check they do get in my book.

If I don't go backrupt during this pandemic I'm definitely going to look into becoming an ICANN accredited registrar :). I'm only accredited for some ccTLDs as of now which is very cost effective when you scale things up. Way cheaper than ICANN accreditation and I don't have enough gTLD volume to justify it yet. But you know... a man can always dream :)
 
4
•••
haha, before i read your details, i was thinking, this person is camping out in their server room and needs to leave. My bad, lol, nah, for what they do all of them are safe wise over the next one. Its really which one will a hacker pick for its next target, understand?
 
0
•••
If I don't go backrupt during this pandemic I'm definitely going to look into becoming an ICANN accredited registrar :). I'm only accredited for some ccTLDs as of now which is very cost effective when you scale things up. Way cheaper than ICANN accreditation and I don't have enough gTLD volume to justify it yet. But you know... a man can always dream :)

I was surprised to learn the ICANN accreditation fee is only like $3,500. But you have to show financial solvency (at least $70,000 in the bank if I remember correctly). But then you have to put funds on deposit which each registry you want to register names with. You got alot of technical and operational requirements. And you got ongoing ICANN fees of I think $1,000 per quarter plus per domain fees.

I'm not sure where exactly but at some point it may prove cheaper to be your own registrar if you have a large enough portfolio (probably would require several hundred thousand domains if I had to guess)
 
6
•••
I vote for Epik
 
3
•••
I was surprised to learn the ICANN accreditation fee is only like $3,500. But you have to show financial solvency (at least $70,000 in the bank if I remember correctly). But then you have to put funds on deposit which each registry you want to register names with. You got alot of technical and operational requirements. And you got ongoing ICANN fees of I think $1,000 per quarter plus per domain fees.

I'm not sure where exactly but at some point it may prove cheaper to be your own registrar if you have a large enough portfolio (probably would require several hundred thousand domains if I had to guess)

yeah, you will definitely need a lot of domains to make it work. It would be doable if you join forces with domainers holding large enough portfolios. Kinda like the uniregistry model. By domainers for domainers. Doesn't even have to be profitable. Optimising the workflow and backend for domainers will be profitable enough because of the time it'll save. Plans for the future. I'll stop my daydream right here because I'm going a bit offtopic :)
 
1
•••
I'm not sure where exactly but at some point it may prove cheaper to be your own registrar if you have a large enough portfolio (probably would require several hundred thousand domains if I had to guess)

Or buy accredited registrar; many say it easier, than process of applying to b icann accredited; buy a registrar to bypass going through all that.
 
Last edited:
2
•••
basically its guesswork
to feel save means nothing

you missed cloudflare in that list

I don't feel save with any registrar
is that an option, too?

ICAN fees are more like $4500 USD per quarter
as far as I know
 
3
•••
basically its guesswork
to feel save means nothing

you missed cloudflare in that list

Cloudflare, is 9th from the top,

Your vote would double their votes (y)
 
Last edited:
1
•••
I voted for Epik, and I also vote with my wallet. I used to have domains across so many registrars... now they are all there.

All these years having Rob Monster, and his team, helping out gave me all the confidence I needed.
 
Last edited:
4
•••
It really depends on what your goal is for the domain.

1.) If I'm going to resell it to an end user or "casual" buyer who is not a "domainer" and doesn't try to get the absolute lowest price and just wants something familiar, I go with GoDaddy. Quite simply they are the name brand of domain names that casuals will be familiar with and many will already have accounts there, great for clients who don't care and want to feel safe despite insane renewal prices and poor competitive pricing.

2.) If I want the absolute cheapest domain names possible I will go with NameSilo or NameBright. Although Epik.com has .COM's for around $8 (once you contact support to unlock this pricing) but I've had issues with them in terms of domains being locked and not being able to transfer them to clients.

Some people chose a registrar for it's custom landing pages to help sell domains (NameSilo is one example), some people want integrated access to a registrar's Auction platform such as GoDaddy, it really all depends.

Most domainers will end up using 3 or more domain registrars, possibly more if you're like me and you build websites or web applications for multiple clients on various hosting platforms and registrars.
 
4
•••
It really depends on what your goal is for the domain.

1.) If I'm going to resell it to an end user or "casual" buyer who is not a "domainer" and doesn't try to get the absolute lowest price and just wants something familiar, I go with GoDaddy. Quite simply they are the name brand of domain names that casuals will be familiar with and many will already have accounts there, great for clients who don't care and want to feel safe despite insane renewal prices and poor competitive pricing.

2.) If I want the absolute cheapest domain names possible I will go with NameSilo or NameBright. Although Epik.com has .COM's for around $8 (once you contact support to unlock this pricing) but I've had issues with them in terms of domains being locked and not being able to transfer them to clients.

Some people chose a registrar for it's custom landing pages to help sell domains (NameSilo is one example), some people want integrated access to a registrar's Auction platform such as GoDaddy, it really all depends.

Most domainers will end up using 3 or more domain registrars, possibly more if you're like me and you build websites or web applications for multiple clients on various hosting platforms and registrars.

For 60- day locks, you can opt out. We usually waive them upon request anyway. The main reason to have them is to safeguard against someone buying a premium domain name with a bad credit card and then disappearing with the domain name. For folks with portfolios at Epik, or who we know, there is really no need to enforce that policy. ICANN allows us which is handy sometimes, but otherwise not.
 
6
•••
It really depends on what your goal is for the domain.

1.) If I'm going to resell it to an end user or "casual" buyer who is not a "domainer" and doesn't try to get the absolute lowest price and just wants something familiar, I go with GoDaddy. Quite simply they are the name brand of domain names that casuals will be familiar with and many will already have accounts there, great for clients who don't care and want to feel safe despite insane renewal prices and poor competitive pricing.

2.) If I want the absolute cheapest domain names possible I will go with NameSilo or NameBright. Although Epik.com has .COM's for around $8 (once you contact support to unlock this pricing) but I've had issues with them in terms of domains being locked and not being able to transfer them to clients.

Some people chose a registrar for it's custom landing pages to help sell domains (NameSilo is one example), some people want integrated access to a registrar's Auction platform such as GoDaddy, it really all depends.

Most domainers will end up using 3 or more domain registrars, possibly more if you're like me and you build websites or web applications for multiple clients on various hosting platforms and registrars.

IMO choosing your registrar based on your customers isnt necessary. If they want to use GD I'll give them the auth code and they can transfer it.

That said something that would be really nice @Rob Monster is if I could create an Epik account for the buyer and push the domain to it either manually or automatically with an API call, especially if I could link their account to my affiliate code. Just an interesting idea I just had.

I kinda imagine it as an AccountPush API endpoint where I can say push this domain to the account for this email address. If that email address is already a user it would complete the push, if not it would send that user an email to set a password, whois details, ect complete account setup then auto push the domain once completed. And if an account is created and I'm opted into the affiliate program maybe even link that account so I can get a commission if they renew the domain with Epik or register or transfer in other domains.
 
Last edited:
1
•••
Forget favorite or best overall, which registrar would be your pick from a safety standpoint.

Things like

Their security
Financial position
Free speech and how they work with government agencies
Have true privacy protection that they won't easily allowed penetrated
Redemption periods
Getting paid or refunds

etc...
For me,

So far DynaDot is best.

GoDaddy, comes second, used to be first choice earlier.
 
3
•••
1.) If I'm going to resell it to an end user or "casual" buyer who is not a "domainer" and doesn't try to get the absolute lowest price and just wants something familiar, I go with GoDaddy. Quite simply they are the name brand of domain names that casuals will be familiar with and many will already have accounts there, great for clients who don't care and want to feel safe despite insane renewal prices and poor competitive pricing.

2.) If I want the absolute cheapest domain names possible I will go with NameSilo or NameBright. Although Epik.com has .COM's for around $8 (once you contact support to unlock this pricing) but I've had issues with them in terms of domains being locked and not being able to transfer them to clients.

Some people chose a registrar for it's custom landing pages to help sell domains (NameSilo is one example), some people want integrated access to a registrar's Auction platform such as GoDaddy, it really all depends.

Most domainers will end up using 3 or more domain registrars, possibly more if you're like me and you build websites or web applications for multiple clients on various hosting platforms and registrars.[/QUOTE]

Good breakdown, I had a sale recently where the name was at another registrar and the buyer was like flipping out, I need it at GoDaddy, if it's not there no deal. I was like ok I will transfer it to my account at GoDaddy. They were like, "I don't know what that means" So when people are outside the industry a lot of them just equate domains to GoDaddy.
 
4
•••
why do I get the feeling that you could ask a random question like "which registrar likes cheese the best" and the voting will follow a similar pattern?
 
2
•••
This thread may be more relevant than many think as we do not know where others have assets or investments.
 
3
•••
Appraise.net
Escrow.com
Spaceship
Domain Recover
CryptoExchange.com
Catchy
CatchDoms
DomainEasy โ€” Live Options
DomDB
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the pageโ€™s height.
Back