Domain
Names–Protect Your's From Drop Catchers
Imagine you’re the owner of a successful Web site, but when you
logon one day all you get is an error message. Or worse yet,
the domain name now points to a site full of advertisements.
That’s right. You’re out of business.
This happens every day because of a perfectly legitimate
process known as “drop catching,” where people quickly snag the
domain names owners have let expire and try to resell them or
use the links associated with the names, which could be
extensive, to create Web sites loaded with advertisements.
You can easily avoid becoming a victim of a drop catcher by
better understanding how the domain registration system works
to protect your domain name. Your Web site, with all the
content you have so painstakingly added, sits on a computer
with a unique address called an IP address, which is simply a
series of numbers.
A domain name is an address forwarding service that directs
visitors to the site using this IP address. Domain names are
used instead of numbers because most people find it easier to
remember a name rather than a bunch of numbers. It’s as if you
could dial your friend’s name into the telephone instead of his
phone number.
You can purchase a domain name by registering it with a
provider of domain services such as GoDaddy.com , the largest
on the Web, or any number of other registrars. The name can be
registered for just one year, for about $10, or for as long as
ten years, for around $80. Many register for only one year
because it’s cheaper, or they only want the site for a limited
time. At the end of the year, the registrar usually sends an
email renewal notice to the owner.
If the owner doesn’t respond to the renewal notice, the
domain name will eventually be made available for purchase by
someone else. Roughly 20,000 domain names become available
every day because the owners allowed them to expire, or the
owners didn’t realize that their domain name was up for renewal
According to the rules established by the Internet Corporation
for Assigned Names and Numbers(ICANN), domain registrars have
45 days after the expiration date to notify the owner that
their domain name is going to be dropped from the registry.
If the name is dropped, the guidelines then call for a
30-day grace period during which the owner can still claim the
name. After this grace period and then another five-day holding
period, the name is dropped from the registry and anyone can
claim it.
Since 2004, however, a number of domain service providers,
starting with SnapName.com, have created an auction process for
expired names which bypasses the original drop process and
makes the names available in as little as thirty days.
GoDaddy.com begins the auction process even before the names
have officially expired, although it does warn the auction
participants that the owner could still claim their name.
These providers of domain services each have tools on their
sites to make it easier to grab expired names.
They provide constantly updated lists of expired names,
various auction services, search engines, and other free tools
for anyone to quickly and easily find available domain
names.
Some sites also offer software for sale that further
simplifies the search for expired and soon to be expired names.
With the surge in online advertising, drop catchers will
continue to seek out domain names from sites with good traffic,
anxious to exploit the established links. Protect your site and
your business by checking the expiration date of your domain
name.
Relying on the registrar to send a renewal notice that could
easily be sent to an old email address or get lost in the spam
catcher, could cost you years of hard work.
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