Post by Andrew Allemann at DomainNameWire.COM on May 21, 2015
What’s the difference between whois privacy and whois proxy?
With talk in Washington and policy circles about whois privacy, I think it would be good to define both whois privacy and whois proxy, and discussed how the terms are usually used.
Traditionally, WHOIS PRIVACY has referred to a service in which the owner of a domain name is listed in the public whois record contacts, but the privacy service’s contact details (phone, address, email et al) are listed instead of the owner’s. This makes the registrant the owner of the domain but keeps them from getting telemarketing calls or having to disclose their home address. NiceNIC.NET offer WHOIS PRIVACY for free!
A WHOIS PROXY goes a step further by masking the identity of the registrant. The proxy service acts as a proxy registrant. NiceNIC.NET offer WHOIS PROXY for free!
In practice, most people refer to whois proxy services as whois privacy. Since services have mostly moved from privacy to proxy, I also use the terms interchangeably on this blog.
Although whois proxy gets a bad rap, there are a lot of legitimate uses for it.
Companies might want to hide new product or branding plans, for example. Also, having your contact details exposed in whois leads to telemarketing calls, spam, etc.
If you’re using a privacy service because having your information exposed would cause harm to you, be careful. It’s not foolproof. For example, Domains By Proxy will remove the proxy if you get hit with a UDRP. This is because it’s just a proxy, and you need to be able to defend the UDRP.
Marketing Team
http://nicenic.net
ICANN CNNIC HKIRC Accredited Registrar - See more at: http://nicenic.net/news/messview.php?ID=17136
What’s the difference between whois privacy and whois proxy?
With talk in Washington and policy circles about whois privacy, I think it would be good to define both whois privacy and whois proxy, and discussed how the terms are usually used.
Traditionally, WHOIS PRIVACY has referred to a service in which the owner of a domain name is listed in the public whois record contacts, but the privacy service’s contact details (phone, address, email et al) are listed instead of the owner’s. This makes the registrant the owner of the domain but keeps them from getting telemarketing calls or having to disclose their home address. NiceNIC.NET offer WHOIS PRIVACY for free!
A WHOIS PROXY goes a step further by masking the identity of the registrant. The proxy service acts as a proxy registrant. NiceNIC.NET offer WHOIS PROXY for free!
In practice, most people refer to whois proxy services as whois privacy. Since services have mostly moved from privacy to proxy, I also use the terms interchangeably on this blog.
Although whois proxy gets a bad rap, there are a lot of legitimate uses for it.
Companies might want to hide new product or branding plans, for example. Also, having your contact details exposed in whois leads to telemarketing calls, spam, etc.
If you’re using a privacy service because having your information exposed would cause harm to you, be careful. It’s not foolproof. For example, Domains By Proxy will remove the proxy if you get hit with a UDRP. This is because it’s just a proxy, and you need to be able to defend the UDRP.
Marketing Team
http://nicenic.net
ICANN CNNIC HKIRC Accredited Registrar - See more at: http://nicenic.net/news/messview.php?ID=17136
It was wondering if I could use this write-up on my other website, I will link it back to your website though.Great Thanks.
ReplyDeletereverse whois