Domain Registration, Renewals and Transfers
Registrars
I have encouraged our clients to allow MadRiverConsulting (MRC)
to administer their domains. The only service I willingly use is
Tucows through the MadRiverAccess reseller. Whenever possible, I
transfer registrations to MadRiverAccess. They are reliable and
inexpensive, and real people can be contacted. They send a reminder
90, 60, 30 and 3 days prior to the renewal deadline, so it is virtually
a fail-safe process. The cost is $15.00 per year, which is not the
cheapest in town (but close), the system works, and it is my recommendation
that the reliability and convenience is worth it. (The range of
prices I have seen is from $8.95 to $37.50 per year, so $15 is not
much more than the minimum.) A transfer to MadRiverAccess also adds
an additional year to the registration, so no time is lost.
If you have not already purchased a domain, please
let us do it for you. It is a multi-step process.
We will eventually need to change the DNS information
to reflect the hosting server address and have seen
this step cost clients more when we have to coach
them (or when passwords have been lost or email addresses
have changed) than if we did it ourselves.
When MRC Manages Your Domain(s)
When I am designated the admin contact, specifically
when the admin contact email address is mine, I take
personal responsibility to make sure your domains
get renewed each year.
When registered by us with Tucows through MadRiverAccess, you will
be invoiced by MRC.
Some people are concerned to have their website developer
be the admin contact. If you work with a reputable
firm, you should trust your website developer as much
as you trust your accountant or attorney.
Currently, we charge a quarter-hour fee to renew a domain for clients
who host with other services, and no charge (for the first domain)
to clients who host with MadRiverWeb. We have been processing
all renewals for two years or five years at a time unless otherwise
specified. The two year (or more) renewal has the added benefit
of helping search utility optimization.
When You Manage Your Domain(s)
If we did not register your domain(s) for you, it
is important to keep a record of your login information
(a username and password) so that you may administer
your domain. It is also important that you
are the registrant, not the developer, friend or foe
that registered it for you. We recommend that you
use our email address for the admin contact so that
we may handle this for you, but make sure it is either
your email address or ours, no-one else's.
Keep your contact information up-to-date. If you change email addresses,
change your domain name registration(s) to reflect the new address
so you will have the continued ability to respond to inquiries or
confirmations. If your domain registrar has an auto-renewal feature,
make sure your credit card does not expire. I have had clients lose
domains because they either didn't follow through on renewal or
they changed email addresses and were unreachable for renewal.
Please make note if you have domains that are not registered and
managed by MRC. You have been and will continue to be responsible
for their renewal unless you contact us requesting assistance.
Domain Transfer or DNS Change
If you have moved your hosting or have a domain for which the DNS
needs to be changed, there are a couple approaches.
If you know your login and wish to continue managing your own domain
name, you can change the DNS as your host requests. Check first
to see if the domain needs to be unlocked and do so. If hosting
with us, the DNS should be ns1.madriveraccess.com and ns2.madriveraccess.com.
If you wish for us to manage your domain, change the admin email
contact to domains@madriverweb.com. We can then transfer the domain
to the registrar that we use and change the DNS ourselves.
If making a DNS change on a domain registered with Network Solutions,
it would be best to have us do it with your login.
Voluntary Domain Expiration
If you wish to allow one or more of your domain names to expire,
seriously consider this. Services, including some porn websites,
seeking the traffic that your non-renewed domain(s) will deliver
will purchase them speculatively. Domains are cheap. We strongly
recommend that you renew at least one more year but no longer point
the domain(s) toward your website. A non-performing domain is much
less desirable for other services to grab when it does expire.
Hijacking
Many of you have received solicitations in the postal mail to renew
your domains, often generating confusion and alarm. I have seen
solicitations come from the following firms, and will expand the
list as more are noted:
- Domain Registry of America
- Liberty Names of America
- Register.com
- ICLS.net
These solicitations are often called "Domain Expiration Notices."
I have even seen them come after a domain has already been renewed.
They are sent by postal mail so that the "less informed"
may accidentally make payment. The domain is then "hijacked"
to this new registrar. By paying them, you are providing authorization
to move your domain name to a different registration company. Please
see full article.
The problem is that to complete the process of moving the domain,
confirmation and an authorization code are required from the administrative
contact. Since the admin contact would not likely authorize the
transfer, nor would we want to move the domain away from our chosen
service, you would be faced with seeking reimbursement. If any problems
existed with your current registration, such as an incorrect email
address, you could also be faced with losing your domain if the
transfer was not confirmed and the domain was not renewed at the
current registrar, regardless of having paid the new firm.
If in doubt, check with us first or look it up yourself
using the link at right. You may find that the domain has already
been renewed by us.
Solicitations
Other variations of solicitaton have been observed, some seeking
to assist in preventing third parties from registering
domains similar to yours. Again, if in doubt, ask us.
This page updated June 26, 2008.
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