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| Hi All, I was looking at a domain registration site and noticed an optional fee to have your registration information (name, address, email, phone number) private. Do any of you use this feature or have any opinions on it? Thanks for any thoughts on this. peace DavidH |
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| My opinion on private DNS registrations is that if you are going to use it, it shows that you have something to hide. If you have something to hide, then you aren't trustworthy or trusting enough for my business. Of course, the only DNS info that I've ever looked up was from spammers anyways, and I always don't trust them... so realistically, someone making their registration info private wouldn't affect their customers (if I'm at all like a typical customer). The people who sell the private DNS registrations tell you that it is to keep spam down to a minimum. Honestly, it doesn't affect spam one iota, since there are far, far more sources of email addresses than people's DNS information... and what is the most common contact address on a DNS entry? "webmaster @ example.com"... so spammers don't bother to look at the DNS for fresh supplies of emails. If you want to spend the extra money to stop a couple of hypothetical spam attempts, then go ahead. Honestly, I don't see the point.
__________________ People often say that 'beauty is in the eye of the beholder,' and I say that the most liberating thing about beauty is realizing that you are the beholder. This empowers us to find beauty in places where others have not dared to look, including inside ourselves. --Salma Hayek My blog: Adam's Peace |
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| There's other ways to privatize your DNS information. For example, I use my business name and a PO Box. There are good reasons to go private, such as security issues, so I don't hold anything against private DNS info. My biggest worry (or annoyance) with non-private DNS info is that your email is available to all, and posted online, so you better have a good spam filter. My domain name company, namecheap.com, provides free WhoisGuards with every registration, so I say why not? |
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