| > If it's a high-value domain, you call the registrar and get it back. When a domain name is stolen, definitionally it leaves control of the registrar. > Worst case, you can sue the thief if you hold a trademark for the name. You can also sue a thief who has a blockchain name. Blockchains don't magically make it so you can't sue someone and win a judgement. International lawsuits for domain recovery work fine if you're a medium to large company. But "just sue an international thief" doesn't work so well if you're a small business or an individual. In that case, DNS doesn't hold any legal advantage over ENS, whereas ENS allows for much greater flexibility in secure custody setups to prevent theft in the first place. > There is. It's called "a lawsuit". And you can just as "easily" sue someone who steals a blockchain name. Just dig past the fake identity they're hiding behind, figure out which city and country they live in, hire a private investigator to determine their name and address, and hire a lawyer that practices in the theif's country but speaks your native language. It's not any harder than suing someone who stole your DNS name. |
So call the registry?
The difference is that a judgement will actually get you something because in the end, the registry can give the domain to whoever they want. If your crypto DNS name is gone, you can’t appeal anywhere, even if you win your lawsuit (which you will, the opponent won’t appear).