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by domain-tempacct 1400 days ago
> Can you use the AXFR or IXFR command to list the zone?

I don't know what this means.

> Do you have e.g. a bind .jnl file of one of the NS behind the zone, because you can re-create the text form of the zone from the binary zone state in journal.

I don't believe that I do. I just used the web interface to set the domains up.

> Do you know how to talk to the Registry, rather than a registrar, because you own the domain, and even under contract for service, its your name, not their name unless you signed a very awkward contract.

I don't

> Do you have a lawyer? I think you need one.

I guess I might have to get one?

I wish I could just get the zone files and leave. I don't want to create a fuss.

1 comments

At this point, a Fuss is all you have. if the web lets you "add a nameserver" there's a path out where you get a nameserver somebody you trust runs, to get a copy of the zone, and use "bind" journal de-compile tools to see it in plaintext

Depending on how long you have had the zone, re-delegating it through another registrar may be timelocked. Its a bit of a shit-show.

You are on a steep learning curve or need consultant/contractor help (which btw I cannot do, sorry)

sorry to reply here, looks like i can't reply to your other comment because it's too deep

it's not that i "have a new registrar" per se

it's that when i go to a new registrar and say "hey, my old registrar is abusing me and won't give me the zone files, can you help" they say "just get the zone files" on customer service patrick star mode :(

i don't know, maybe i'm being unreasonable?

i just want to keep my domains up

if i have to go to a lawyer i will but i really don't want to, that sounds very expensive and i'm worried the old registrar will escalate if i do that

i just want my zone files so i can leave, you know?

I feel like all I really need is for the old registrar to provide the existing configuration files

The new registrar is happy to consume them directly and re-create them

ok. so if you have a new registrar, then there is a registry-registrar conversation here bound in an ICANN contract. You really need somebody in the new registrar, talking to the old registrar AND the registry, who is motivated to push buttons (metaphorically) to make the old registrar want to give the data up. I am pretty sure that the names, and associated records, are "yours" if its "your" zone. The contract for services outside of DNS which may lie behind those names "let us host your web for you" are different: you could wind up with your DNS zone, and your web offline because they manage that too. Not all "hosting" is DNS only.

If you have a new registrar, this situation shouldn't be unfamiliar to them..