Why You Need Private Whois Service for Domain Registration?

Privacy is the control of one’s own personal information, control over what others know about one, and control over how others may use or exploit the personal information. Policies and practices for protecting privacy aim towards minimizing the collection of personally identifiable information. Therefore, the basis of privacy is anonymity, where no personally identifiable information is collected. Making compulsory, the disclosure of personally identifiable information, as under current WhoIs policies for domain registration, cause privacy to be undermined

For free speech, privacy is critical. For instance, if people are forced to disclose their identity, they are reluctant to fully express their ideas on account of fear of persecution.

The protection of anonymity further enhances the one-to-many characteristics of the Internet through which an individual’s speech can reach a global audience.

Privacy and data protection laws may apply to domain registrars’ WhoIs services and registrars’ participation in thick registry WhoIs services in various countries, particularly in the European Union’s member states.

Current ICANN regulations require that the Private contact information (WhoIs Info) of each domain registration be included in a publicly accessible Database.

The WhoIs database is the collection of information gathered by a domain name registrar from domain name registrants.

The purpose for which the WhoIs system is accessed includes:

1. To find out whether a specific domain name is unregistered and currently available

2. To identify the person or organization responsible for a domain registration or website on the Internet

3. To support technical operations of Internet Service Providers or network administrators, including assistance in tracing sources of Spam or denial of service attacks

4. To collect names and contact information for the purpose of marketing

5. To aid government law enforcement, other than intellectual property

When a WhoIs search is conducted, the information that is currently available about the domain name registrant leads to the name and address of the domain name owner.

However, when a domain name is registered, the personal contact information such as name, address, email address, and even phone number might be made freely available.

The domain registrant would not know who collected his/her WhoIs data, the reason for which the information was collected, and how the collector is likely to use the information

This implies that the private information is displayed and made available to whoever wants to see it, at any point of time.

Now it is possible to protect one’s private WhoIs information by switching the “public” domain registration to a “private” unlisted registration through a private whois service.

A private whois service protects the private information and shields against its misuse. Hence, one is protected against:

- Spam,

- Identity Theft,

- Data Mining,

- Name Hijackers,

- Etc.

It works in a similar way to having one’s phone number “unlisted” and it prevents people from gaining access to one’s address, phone number and other such private information.

A private whois service works by:

- Protecting the private information

- Relaying important communication

- Providing greater control

Protecting the Private Information

This implies that the private contact information is not exposed and is held confidentially, and protected by the Domain Privacy Protection Service. Instead of the individual’s contact information, their contact information is displayed to provide with the highest level of protection against spammers and identity theft.

Relaying Important Communication

Without a private whois service, those involved in spamming can obtain email addresses through harvesting and then use these for sending spam mails and redistribution to marketing firms. The email addresses can stay on record with various spammers and marketing firms for several years. With a private whois service, the visible email address is constantly changing, so it will change within a specific period of time and the previous address will not work for the spammer. The Domain Privacy Protection Service secures and maintains the real email address on record so that important information regarding the domain is received.

Providing Greater Control

The individual or organization subscribing to the private whois service retains full legal ownership and control over the domain registration. It is possible to sell, renew, transfer and change settings to the domain name just the same as otherwise. The domain control panel provides real-time access to easily manage the domain name.


14 Responses so far | Have Your Say!

  1. how to start a blog - Gravatar

    how to start a blog  |  February 19th, 2010 at 7:33 pm #

    It just makes it harder for people to find you, but they still can through the registrar.

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    Online Finance Courses  |  February 24th, 2010 at 4:32 am #

    I cant answer myself why domain registration is needed. And another thing who are the companies that register domain names, why they, where does money from registration go and what are they used for.

  3. Accident law - Gravatar

    Accident law  |  March 2nd, 2010 at 6:27 am #

    Please tell me if you know any other good registars that are good value like these ones and why you would you recommend it? Or maybe is GoDaddy good enough and I’m being too choosy? I would very much like to know your opinion on this.

  4. Property in India - Gravatar

    Property in India  |  March 3rd, 2010 at 4:06 am #

    Private registration costs too much if you want to apply privacy to a large portfolio of domain names. Is there a solution? The registrar that I use charges $9.95 a year per domain name. I have close to 200 domain names. It costs me a lot to renew my domain names already.

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    online share trading  |  March 3rd, 2010 at 7:52 am #

    Just enter BOWL2010 in the coupon form to see the discounted price of 99 cents along with the additional 18 cents ICANN fee. If any of you are aware of other coupons to lower the price, please post in the comments.

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    best wordpress themes  |  March 3rd, 2010 at 8:19 am #

    It seems that Google has finally gone on the record that longer domain name registration has no impact on your search engine rankings, at least not at Google. A Google Webmaster Help thread has a post from Googler, JohnMu, who said outright that it doesn’t make sense for Google to use this as a ranking metric.

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    promotional items  |  March 3rd, 2010 at 9:02 am #

    Once you are ready to substitute the private, anonymous information about your domain with your new registered company’s details, you can easily convert your anonymous domain into public domain.

  8. Thomas - Gravatar

    Thomas  |  March 4th, 2010 at 3:53 pm #

    I always get my domains with private whois, cause you never know who checks out that info and what they might want to do with.

  9. used tires - Gravatar

    used tires  |  March 6th, 2010 at 12:17 pm #

    GoDaddy recently launched its Domains by Proxy sister company. The jurisdiction belongs to the US however for the Domains by Proxy. There are many offshore jurisdictions that are less sensitive to some strict US laws. Malaysia, Panama are just two examples.

  10. Email Delivery - Gravatar

    Email Delivery  |  March 6th, 2010 at 2:08 pm #

    Yes I agree with your post but why is that there are sites that charge their customers for this feature? isn’t this must included in the package. thanks

  11. Surfers paradise - Gravatar

    Surfers paradise  |  March 11th, 2010 at 11:22 pm #

    The fact that the CAN SPAM law’s test is a two-prong test would appear to account for private registration. Yes, common sense tells us that private registration, as you have defined it, is a material falsification of one’s identity. But meeting one prong of the test does not trigger liability. If a private registrant has no intention of issuing spam, what’s the problem?

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    Movies Wallpaper  |  April 11th, 2010 at 4:11 am #

    Thanks for share , wait for more articles.

  13. subyudin - Gravatar

    subyudin  |  April 17th, 2010 at 6:34 pm #

    Learn How A 31 Years Old Latin Guy, Made Over $18,000 last year Just Registering Domain Names, (and) without-spending-a single-dime on hosting fees or web designs. Learn The Basics + The Secrets!
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  14. ElvaZamora21 - Gravatar

    ElvaZamora21  |  June 22nd, 2010 at 2:14 pm #

    If you are willing to buy a car, you will have to receive the personal loans. Moreover, my father usually takes a short term loan, which occurs to be the most fast.

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