TE
科技回声
首页24小时热榜最新最佳问答展示工作
GitHubTwitter
首页

科技回声

基于 Next.js 构建的科技新闻平台,提供全球科技新闻和讨论内容。

GitHubTwitter

首页

首页最新最佳问答展示工作

资源链接

HackerNews API原版 HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 科技回声. 版权所有。

Ask HN: Registrars least likely to screw up?

2 点作者 ekns将近 3 年前
I&#x27;ve been pondering on and off again how best to avoid ending up in some kafkaesque algorithmic loop where your gmail account, domain name, etc. are suddenly blocked by the registrar for unspecified reasons with little to no way to resolve the situation, as has happened to &quot;many&quot; here.<p>I thought Cloudflare would be pretty good, out of the non-enterprise priced options, but even there someone had a really worrying incident recently: https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=31573854<p>I&#x27;m inclined to think that the buck always stops somewhere, and no place is really safe in this regard, but is there really no way to have some reasonable safeguards for these? The individual domains may be of little value to a registrar, but they&#x27;re potentially enormously valuable to their owners, and the apparent asymmetry of incentives concerns me.<p>Are we just forced to generate noise on HN to resolve such cases or are there any reasonable alternatives out there that offer guarantees about only resorting to blocking&#x2F;deleting domain in extreme cases, and provide the means to escalate without HN outcry?

1 comment

night-rider将近 3 年前
A few registrars I trust are Gandi, OVH, Namecheap. They have enough skin in the game to be trusted.