Okay..WTF? http://ai. Didn’t work on Chrome Mac but it works in Safari for iOS. Is this a bug or how the hell is this possible? It’s flipping everything I thought I knew about domains upside down.
It wasn’t a mistake it was a strategic cost benefit analysis. Many people myself included don’t even use the webcam at all and would rather keep it blocked with a sticker most of the time. If most people statistically don’t use webcam on their MacBook why would it make sense to increase the price to have it? The few times I opened FaceTime app on the MacBook 2020 it looked fine to me anyways. I certainly wouldn’t like paying say an extra $100 for a better webcam I don’t even use.
Why do they think they have the right to kill domains that people have entrusted them with their custodianship? I don't understand why they have to set any domain to pendingDelete status, short of a court order. It sounds like something ripe for abuse. I don't see what the benefit of overzealous deletion is. If they think a domain is malicious they want to stop it they can simply disable it via NS records without actually deleting it for the remainder of the contract payment cycle. People shouldn't have to live in fear that their domain might randomly be deleted with no recourse. Perhaps new legislation is necessary to protect people's domains from random registrar deletion.
The process wasn't described inaccurately in the OP post. What you said here doesn't contradict anything in the OP post and infact confirms that it happened.
>domains determined to be malicious registrations/transfers may be deleted
The person in the story's domain was determined to be malicious and deleted for fraud. (however in reality it wasn't) and thus deleted, like you said.
>Cloudflare allows transfers of domains out of Cloudflare’s registrar immediately, unless there are indications of potentially malicious or fraudulent activity.
This is what the OP post described has happened in the story. The person's domain was determined fraudulent and was thus disallowed from transfering out, like you said.
>Cloudflare follows the standard industry practice followed by virtually all domain registrars of blocking the transfer out of domains deleted for what appears to be potentially malicious purposes.
The fact is, a serious mistake was made by Cloudflare and evidently the guy had no way to appeal the decision outside of Hacker News. It is clear that this industry practice needs reform. Perhaps instead of trying to dismiss/downplay this your time would be better spent improving the process or maybe implementing some form of due process/trial for these extremely important accounts. An accidental domain deletion seems to be no big deal to you. But in reality its a nightmare that can cause serious harm to a persons life and livelihood.
Try to imagine it yourself how it would feel. if one day all your important accounts stopped working. all your domains has been hijacked! Why? because your registrar set it to DELETED on short notice due to random false-positive-fraud and a sniper re-registers it elsewhere! there is nothing you can do about it, your registrar stonewalls you. You're completely screwed and theres nothing you can do about it. Your valuable domain is gone. All your important accounts tied to email on that domain get broken into. Your companies and brand are destroyed. No one ever suspects their properly secured domain name will randomly be DELETED in < than the time it was registered for. This is a really traumatic event for people and not something that should be minimized.
Not everyone shares your enthusiasm. Yes, this is good for foreigners and corporations but it comes at the expense of native workers. it suppresses wages(often times immigrants are willing to do the same jobs at lower salaries), as well as makes it more difficult for native workers to find a job due to increased competition.
I really don't know what you're talking about. How are a few hundred Harvard graduates going to meaningfully 'suppress wages' in the UK? If anything, they'll actually increase demand for goods and services in the UK - which is going to push up wages.
I'm willing to entertain the argument that thousands of low-skilled migrants out compete indigenous low-skilled labour and push down wages. But that obviously doesn't apply in this context.
If anything, US DE and JP workers would actually need higher salaries to justify their coming to, and staying in, the UK.
I don't mind whether or not people 'share my enthusiasm'.
That’s terrifying. By far the worst part of this. If they ban somebody for TOS violations that is fair, but preventing people from transferring out their domain and setting it to pendingdelete is really insidious. What they are doing is akin to stealing anyone domain name permanently with no recourse. This may be grounds for a lawsuit.
It's abuse and theft, plain and simple. Replace "domain" with literally any physical object. You can't just take someone else's shit, no matter how high-and-mighty you think you are (excepting governments, of course).
Oh, if anyone wants to argue that it’s “in the TOS” that sounds like a contract no normal person would sign and likely not enforceable (IANAL) if pushed. No “sane” person would say, “yeah, if you think I’m doing something wrong, just sell all my shit!”
It’s sickening. They are committing a massive crime here and getting away with it. It’s time somebody alerts the media and blow the whistle on Cloudflares abusive actions.
I wonder how many customers domains Cloudflare stole/deleted who’s owner didn’t have the luxury of knowing the Hacker News publicity trick?
Indeed, this might likely fall into criminal behavior and not civil (though they’d be liable for civil damages as well). Someone should let a few jurisdictions that have cloud flare customers and theft is illegal know about this.
I implore you to consider alerting media outlets about Cloudflares abusive actions anyway. More needs to be down to expose CloudFlare’s abusive actions. They can’t keep getting away with this.
Because http://com. Works as well.