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Comment by throw14082020

5 years ago

I presume you mean there are cases where registrar's have "seized" a domain. Would be good if you had an example, because I sure can't find one.

Here you are, from last month: https://domainnamewire.com/2021/01/17/godaddy-explains-ar15-...

And by 'seizure', I think it is pretty clear that I mean 'revoking access to', in the same way as in the OP Google has revoked access to the given Google account.

  • Well, this is clearly not evidence if you bothered to visit https://www.ar15.com/index.html

    Edit: Godaddy is not just a (crappy) registrar. GoDaddy is also a (crappy) hosting provided which I moved an organization out of.

    Edit again: I guess I ought to explain domain names to you. Most DNS providers are crappy (unlike Cloudflare), and have a non-negligible TTL. Even if AR15 had access to GoDaddy's account to change their DNS records (A record for the www subdomain and root domain), it takes a while for new records to propagate globally.

    More likely, what happened is GoDaddy told AR15 to take their domain to someone else. And thats what they did.

  • Looks like they were able to get the name transferred to Epik. Now try doing the same with your @gmail.com.