Under the terms of the 2013 Registrar Accreditation Agreement registrars are obliged to conduct email verification both on new domain registrations and if there are any changes made to a domain’s registration details.
For those of us in the industry we suspected and feared that the changes could and would lead to issues and headaches. And it looks like it’s already happened ..
I’m not sure if this is the first “high profile” site to be taken offline due to the new ICANN contract, but it’s the first I’ve been made aware of.
Fixtures365.com is operated by BSkyB and is / was a fairly popular sports site.
The site is owned by 365 Media Group which was acquired by Sky a few years ago.
It used to look like this (via Archive.org) :
Now visitors are being greeted by this:
(Hat tip to Chris)
For the curious, the nameservers have clearly been switched to:
Name Server: ns1.domainhasexpired.com
Name Server: ns2.domainhasexpired.com
Update 2355
The domain apparently is now “verified” and the nameservers have been switched back to “live” ones:
Name Server: ns.123-reg.co.uk
Name Server: ns2.123-reg.co.uk
and the landing page has updated to this:
Depending on how ISPs’ DNS resolvers etc., are configured it could several hours before the actual website is viewable by most users of the internet.
Will there be fall out from this?
It’ll be interesting to see..
Is this the last case we’ll come across?
Doubtful.
Maybe the next one will be higher profile..
Related articles
- A big website is going to go dark thanks to ICANN’s new Whois verification (domainnamewire.com)
- Big company’s website suspended thanks to 2013 RAA – Domain Name Wire (cctld.dk)
- Big company’s website suspended thanks to 2013 RAA (domainnamewire.com)
- ICANN Unleashes Deadliest DDoS Attack Vector of 2014 (easydns.org)
Not certain why you “fear” this action. If the people who operate this site don’t care enough to keep their information accurate, why should you fear the outcome? They obviously don’t.
@mneylon So @domainnamewire has precognition abilities : http://t.co/XfKHRMjPFa
Apparently some people can still reach the fixtures365 site – here are screenshots of how it appears to most of us http://t.co/JCdAo2dafg
From @mneylon: High Profile Sports Site Suspended Due To 2013 RAA http://t.co/52vUfpy0dB
RT @mneylon: High Profile Sports Site Suspended Due To 2013 RAA: http://t.co/WmREQcVA9s
@_rubensk @mneylon didn’t take long.
@skybethelp – check your email for fixtures365 .com : http://t.co/1SZYJZtnPn
@notconcerned – It may not be a matter of not “caring enough”. These email notices are a new feature, and most organizations have trained their staffs not to click on links in unfamiliar email messages. Most domain registrants are not expecting a “reply to this email or we shut you off in 15 days” note from their registrar.
“@mneylon: High Profile Sports Site Suspended Due To 2013 RAA: http://t.co/xfJBtMFG5h” — surprised it took this long.
High Profile Sports Site Suspended Due To 2013 RAA – Domain Industry & Internet News http://t.co/nFn002LXc1
Post updated: http://t.co/JCdAo2dafg – the domain is now “verified”
And ICANN has done what to warn the public of these potential domain suspensions?
http://t.co/m9f4SuQiM1
RT @VLawDC: And ICANN has done what to warn the public of these potential domain suspensions?
http://t.co/m9f4SuQiM1
High Profile Sports Site Suspended Due To 2013 RAA – Domain Industry & Internet News http://t.co/le0AlgxtAA
RT @blacknight: High Profile Sports Site Suspended Due To 2013 RAA – Domain Industry & Internet News http://t.co/le0AlgxtAA
A great example of how new ICANN regulations that Law enforcement agencies demanded can take websites off internet http://t.co/epWHJewaK2
RT @miltonmueller: A great example of how new ICANN regulations that Law enforcement agencies demanded can take websites off internet http:…
RT @miltonmueller: A great example of how new ICANN regulations that Law enforcement agencies demanded can take websites off internet http:…