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A .US domain of mine has the status "Domain Status: clientTransferProhibited"
I want to transfer it of of Enom, so went into my account and found their usual Registrar Lock option was not there. I emailed support and they replied:
I thought this was weird, so emailed Moniker (where I want to transfer) about, Moniker replied:
What Moniker have said sounds right. Why are Enom doing this? I have emailed them back in the meantime, but also interested in your thoughts.
Cheers.
I want to transfer it of of Enom, so went into my account and found their usual Registrar Lock option was not there. I emailed support and they replied:
Hello Matt, only .com and .net use registrar lock. All others use transfer codes called EPP KEY's or AUTH CODE's
You can find the AUTHCODE/EPP KEY by going to Domains/MY DOMAINS/ Click on the domain name/ The next screen is the domain control panel. Scroll to the bottom of the page. Under the Utilities section, click on Contact/WhoIs Information. Scroll to the bottom of that page. Look for the blue header that says: Authorization Info (EPP Key). Below that is the key.
I thought this was weird, so emailed Moniker (where I want to transfer) about, Moniker replied:
I am sorry, it appears that you were misinformed by Enom.
The statement, "clientTransferProhibited status is over ridden with the Auth Code." is not true.
The clientTransferProhibited status is actually a status that is only accessable directly through the .US Registry, not through your Enom interface.
Therefore, in order to remove this status, an Enom Representative needs to access the domain name via the .US Registry and remove this status.
Once that is done, the name would then be eligible for transfer.
What Moniker have said sounds right. Why are Enom doing this? I have emailed them back in the meantime, but also interested in your thoughts.
Cheers.