Acroplex said:
Acroplex said:
We currently endeavor to provide a grace period that extends 35 days past the expiration date, to allow the renewal of domain name registration services. On day 21 after the expiration date of a domain, the expired domain will be removed from the customer’s main account management view and all name servers will be changed to Moniker.com name servers. Expired domains will then resolve to special landing pages with a renewal link and Moniker WhoIs will also display the renewal link in an effort to provide as many opportunities to alert our customers that their domains are expired and allow the renewal of such domains that are expired within the grace period. There will also be a Pending Delete status link located inside the My Account area of a customer’s account and included in our weekly renewal and expiration reports that are emailed each week to our customers. During this period a customer can renew a domain name registration; however, a grace period is not guaranteed and can change or be eliminated at any time without notice.
Acroplex said:No, the registrar cannot do "as they please" with an expired domain. It will enter the 35 day - give or take a day - redemption period before becoming ripe for deletion or other manipulation.
dwrixon; nice selective copy and paste from the Moniker Ts&Cs page. I wonder why you didn't include the notice about redemption & pending delete cycles below. I wonder if that's related to your recent inane rant about Moniker having an alleged security issue.
davezan1 said:Let's put it this way: registrars can do anything with an expired domain name
as long as: a) the domain name's still with them, and b) it's within their legal
agreements among themselves and with ICANN.
Until ICANN, a court of competent jurisdiction, or even a "law" giving the final
say on this, registrars are practically free to do anything they want with an
expired name. But again, all within bounds of what "current practices dictate".
Note I put some words in quotation marks. :wink:
If you don't like the terms of your registrar, transfer them to those who meet
your expectations.
dwrixon said:........Please note that Moniker.com is obligated to pay the Registry for all domain renewals the day the domain name expires if it has not been renewed by a customer prior to the expiration date. We therefore take ownership of expired domains until such time they are renewed, back ordered, sold, or deleted......
MonikerMan said:dwrixon - you need to be aware that you do not own your domains, you pay for the right to use them. If you do not pay for them, you will loose them. If this is such majore issue for you, you should renew your domains for 10 years and make sure your domains are at the most secure registrar in the world so you never have to debate what happens if you let your names expire.
jdk said:So when the name expires and it goes into Redemption Period, Moniker pays teh fee....the name drops and they are out the money???
dwrixon said:Furthermore, if it drops, it is not the small domainer that is going to benefit, but Snapnames or Pool.
Stocdoctor said:On and on. ICANNt nor the registries care the slightest about a registrant.
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