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to G_Poobah
Re: Fix Yer ServersNo, you need to learn about the Internet. Especially before calling someone ignorant. You can set more than your provider's name servers for your domain. These losers (losers being the customers and the datacentre) only had quote: Domain servers in listed order: NS1.NECTARTECH.COM NS2.NECTARTECH.COM
for a majority of their customer's domains. If they had third party name servers as slaves, the removal would have taken nothing out but the nectartech.com domain. |
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Sheesh,you just prove your ignorance even more. What you are describing has NOTHING to do with what godaddy did.
The ROOT SERVER which controls the .com name was changed by godaddy ilegally. The ROOT SERVER is what tells the rest of the world where to find the DNS Server. ONLY REGISTRARS can change those records. When you pay for a registrar, they are the ones who post where your DNS Servers are located, via the ROOT SERVERS.
Get a clue..
Godaddy changed the 'whois' results, which returns the ADDRESSES of the DNS servers which service a domain. Without that information being correct (which godaddy ilegally changed), the domain DOES NOT EXIST, cause NO-ONE CAN FIND IT (except for cached copies, or local lookups) |
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to Briggs6
Many large websites use multiple domains as dns servers for this case.
ns1.domain.com ns2.altdomain.com
altdomain.com could be hosted by another registrar just for this purpose. At that point, you can then edit the domains that point to these servers to remove ns1.domain.com and your back in business.
This isn't uncommon. |
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Oh. My. God.
How many rows are on the bus that picks you up each morning? 3, maybe 4?
I don't know how it can be explained any simpler than it already has.
The list you gave contains AUTHORITATIVE NAME SERVERS for the DOMAIN. Yes, you can have names servers at different providers.
However, the list itself is provided by a single REGISTRAR. You can have only one REGISTRAR per domain.
In this case, GoDaddy, the REGISTRAR, changed the AUTHORITATIVE NAME SERVER list so that the DOMAIN was effectively shut down. For example, instead of listing:
ns1.domain.com ns2.altdomain.com
It listed:
ns1.otherdomain.com ns2.otherdomain.com
which were two NAME SERVERS which were NOT AUTHORITATIVE and did not have configurations for the DOMAIN in question, therefore all DNS lookup requests FAILED. |
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owebtw
Anon
2006-Jan-17 8:19 pm
No, you are the ignorant one.
The entire data center went down because all the customers' domains had the nameservers set to ns1.nectartech.com and ns2.nectartech.com. The loss of the nectartech domain resulted in the failure of hundreds of other domains, because all these domains had NECTARTECH as their nameservers. If nectartech had added a second domain from a different registrar, all these other domains would not have been affected. Only nectartech.com would have been affected. |
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owebtw to G_Poobah
Anon
2006-Jan-17 10:20 pm
to G_Poobah
Sheesh, look who's ignorant...
What he is describing has NOTHING to do with what godaddy did, but it has ALL TO DO with whether or not Nectar's Data center goes offline. As most of their customers' domains use nectartech.com as nameservers, failure of the nectartech domain causes failure of all other domains. These other domains would not have had to fail if they had extra nameservers set to domains NOT controlled by GoDaddy.
In addition, it seems clear to me that phishing sites DID exist on the nectartech.com domain. It was on a customer's machine, but that machine had a NECTARTECH.COM DOMAIN!
Nectartech 1. obviously did not take the vulnerability down fast enough. 2. did not follow the directions given in GoDaddy's email AFTER they were shut down (because they kept saying it took too long that way) 3. should not have allowed the entire data center's other domains to rely on one single domain anyway
There is a second part to this phone call where you see this marc person just being an ass. The representative keeps asking him to read the email and follow the instructions and they will reinstate his domain. But he refuses to do as told, and keeps whining at them to "PUT IT BACK UP IMMEDIATELY!!" "IT'S AN EMMMMERGENCY!!" "IT'S AN EMMEEEERGENCY!!"
Why, Marc, didn't you just do as you were told?
GoDaddy had all the right to shut down the domain: 1. Phishing website is on "nectartech.com" domain name. You can see this on the page marc published the emails. 2. Godaddy says the site was not removed. 3. Godaddy shuts down website.
It does not MATTER that it was a customer's website. The offending site USED THE NECTARTECH.COM DOMAIN! If the offending website was on NectarPuke.com and they shut down nectartech.com, that would be GoDaddy's fault. From what I see, it is not. |
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