In an effort to continue providing you with a rock solid service we’ve changed the IP (and moved the service) of mailout.easydns.com The new IP is: 64.68.200.141 The old system will be kept online for a couple of days longer and we will allow it to dequeue all its mail before shutting it down. As […]
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DNSMadeEasy and easyDNS to merge
/Washington, Toronto – 04/01/2010/ Following an emerging trend of consolidation within the DNS hosting space, DNSMadeEasy of Washington, DC and easyDNS of Toronto, have agreed to merge. If approved by regulators in both countries the combination, “will create a new 800 pound gorilla in the room” according to industry commentators. It is yet to be […]
Junior Support Rep Position
easyDNS is hiring a full-time junior support representative. Some experience desired but the most important thing we’re looking for is a good head, ability to work well with others, effective communication, problem solving skills, plus the ability to learn and adapt quickly. We prefer candidates that are english/french bilingual, but it’s not required. Having customers […]
Emails about: Intellectual property rights Regarding "yourname"
It is not uncommon to get unsolicited email from some party representing themselves as an overseas trademark or domain registry that has received a request from some local party that they feel may infringe upon your trademark. You can consider these just a form of marketing email (spam) or a elaborate way to entice you […]
When RBLs go bad: blackholes.uceb.org is now wildcarded
blackholes.uceb.org was an antispam RBL that shut down in 2008, but as with all RBLs, they tend to find their way into mail server configs and then ossify there. It looks like whoever ran uceb.org decided that two years was enough and to let the domain lapse. Yesterday, the domain’s registrar put the domain in […]
.CO Domain Registrations are Coming. Will You Participate?
A bunch of years ago I had an idea for an espionage/action/thriller story where a bunch of mercenaries planned a coup d’etat against the regimes of either Columbia or Cameroon for the sole reason of gaining control over the country’s top-level domain registry and making billions off of typo-squatting .COM. Truth did kind of mimic […]