I was buying a new domain today and one of the "upsells" was to "Make it Private" for only $8.00 a year.
Does this actually keep your info from prying eyes, or can someone with some knowledge still get your WhoIs info?
Just curious.
I was buying a new domain today and one of the "upsells" was to "Make it Private" for only $8.00 a year.
Does this actually keep your info from prying eyes, or can someone with some knowledge still get your WhoIs info?
Just curious.
TropixxxCash.com is a CCBill affiliate program for the male spanking and punishment site TropixxxVIP.com.
:whip:
It does, in fact, keep the information out of whois. However, at least with GoDaddy, I was told by a friend (who it happened to) that all someone has to do is send a threatening letter to them and they immediately fold and give up the private info.
I believe that some other registrars require a subpoena or evidence of a legal action, but don't know which are which.
TropixxxCash.com is a CCBill affiliate program for the male spanking and punishment site TropixxxVIP.com.
:whip:
Google seems to be a registrar, all registrars have access to the "real" whois database so privacy protecting your data is just for the first wave of "attack"
Registrars are quire reluctant in protecting the whois data - like Chip said an evil email will do magic.
I am using alternate person datas for my domains and use privacy protection... that helps me get rid of all the folks here (location wise) hunting me down
:-D
Actually, that isn't true. A registrar doesn't have any more access to Whois information than what one can see with whois.sc or any other lookup tool. That was one of the big issues when Registerfly went south... they had the only database that correlated their "private" registrations, and their database was in shambles, so when GoDaddy, who acquired the domains that Registerfly had held, was trying to get everything straightened out, there were cases where they had no idea who owned some of the domains that had been protected by Registerfly "privacy."
And I wouldn't be surprised if Google is an accredited registrar, but I've never seen them offering domain registration services.
Lloyd - Stunner Media - ICQ: 216150073
"The key to success is to risk thinking unconventional thoughts. Convention is the enemy of progress. If you go down just one corridor of thought you never get to see what’s in the rooms leading off it." - Trevor Baylis
I register my important domains through Network Solutions. Their private registration is $9/yr.. and I pay it.
Other benefits to private registration include spammers not getting your admin contact info ... like your email to constantly peddle domain registration and hosting services. With this information, you have more control of your domain, minimizing the chances of a hacker pirating it.
Steve
Namecheap.com is $9.29 a year (first year includes the $2.88 whois protection)
DEV
:-D
Lloyd - Stunner Media - ICQ: 216150073
"The key to success is to risk thinking unconventional thoughts. Convention is the enemy of progress. If you go down just one corridor of thought you never get to see what’s in the rooms leading off it." - Trevor Baylis
It's $35 for one year typically. I'll renew usually for 2 or 3, and it's cheaper...twentysomething.
I know they cost more, but for my breadbasket domains, I keep returning. I've watched plenty of fly-by-night El Cheapo registrars fold up or get bought.
I do register at GoDaddy for small projects.
Steve
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