Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by robalfonso 1474 days ago
When a domain expires it’s automatically renewed at the registry in the case of gTLD’s.

A registrant then has 30-44 days (depending on the registrar) to “renew” but in fact the domain has already renewed so in what happens is the registrar deletes the domain in the case where they don’t have that affirmative action.

1 comments

Right but that wouldn't apply here I'd assume, unless we're saying the customer's domain was already expired and they didn't renew it?
It does apply here. A domain does not need to be expired, a delete can be sent any time it’s active. The only prohibition is if the domain has “clientDeleteProhibited” status which the registrar can remove.
I must be missing something. Then why does your previous comment start with "When a domain expires" ?
I was just illustrating the normal circumstance delete is used. But there is no reason a delete can’t be used any time on an active domain.

All I can say is read the rfc or take my word for it, I’ve run a registrar.

I think they are saying that is /why/ the capability exists, but in this case the capability is being used beyond its intended scope.
That's possible, but I'm _pretty_ sure that's not how it works, there are restrictions on what circumstances registrars are allowed to do various actions too.
Pretty much, there have been times I’ve deleted a domain due to compliance/legal type issues. It’s more expedient than waiting for an expiration