What happened to Automated outlet?

signal15

Senior Member
http://www.automatedoutlet.com

It goes to a page filled with ads for Home Automation. Are they gone or did they unintentionally let their domain expire? Looks like it expired a few days ago:

Registered through: GoDaddy.com, Inc. (http://www.godaddy.com)
Domain Name: AUTOMATEDOUTLET.COM
Created on: 21-Aug-03
Expires on: 21-Aug-09
Last Updated on: 14-Aug-09
 
I tried calling them, no one is there today. I also tried looking up Martin's personal number to let him know, but it's unlisted.
 
Looks like it's fixed. 1800 second TTL on the A record, so it could take up to a half hour for the old entry to expire in whatever DNS server you're pointing at.
 
Expires: 2010-08-21
Updated: 2009-08-22 (today)
http://whois.domaintools.com/automatedoutlet.com
looks like it was renewed today for another year
I have seen mention that length of registry period makes a difference in Google's search rankings - hard to believe it does lookups and is able to extract that info into something meaningful but -
http://www.circleid.com/posts/search_engin...whois_database/

Anyhow - I hope their online business isn't their main bread and butter for them to only register it a year at a time - as foul ups can (obviously) occur. You can register for up to ten years at a time I think...
 
I think that's one reason why the group responsible for domain registrations changed their policy a few years ago so that when a domain expires, it gets deactivated a month (more?) before becoming available for sale to someone else. They reasoned that the longer the registration period and the bigger the organization, the less likely anyone in that organization will even KNOW who's supposed to be responsible for paying the renewal fee when the expiration date finally arrives. By deactivating it a month before it becomes available to anyone else to register, it gives the original owner time to notice it's not working, figure out who's supposed to take care of it, and get it renewed before someone else scoops it up.

I personally remember a few years ago, when I worked for a division of the company that used to be Worldcom. One of the domain names that was used for non-public things like the VPN and mail server ended up expiring, and at that point the company was in bankruptcy & more or less complete chaos reigned for a day or so because everyone who originally was responsible for taking care of things like that had long since been laid off or quit. It was exacerbated by the fact that since the DNS server worked for everyone accessing the internet from INSIDE the company, the only people who had problems were people trying to access it from the outside. And, of course, since everyone's ISPs had varying levels of respect for TTL and DNS caching, there was no single moment when it quit working for *everyone*. The calls came trickling in to the helpdesk, then kept coming and building up for hours until someone finally put 2 and 2 together & realized that the domain name had expired. Since the helpdesk staff were on the internal network, they couldn't replicate the problem because the DNS lookups DID work for them ;-)
 
Hmmm... I'm just wondering. :)

Can't they just use a special e-mail address for domain registrations? Another words, like this:

[email protected]

?

Then, the manager could just share the passwords to "domain managers" within the company, so that they can monitor e-mails sent to them instead of just one domain manager. One another suggestion is how about having speakers make a sound when new mail arrives when it comes to renewing their domain names.

Of course, that's up to companies to make their own logical decisions, but I thought it could help the company to make sure the domain name is up in the external network (Internet).
 
They also have auto-renew, where you just put in your credit card and it is taken care of. Martin is lucky someone could've swooped in and stolen it if they wanted it bad enough.
 
Even if it expired, GoDaddy has a 30 day grace period, and even after that, they still bug the hell out of you (been trying to get rid of 2 domains). Glad to hear it has been taken care of tho.
 
LOL, Yes, it was set for auto-renew but the credit card they had on file was expired.

Got it fixed - thanks for the call Morgan!

Oh, and yes, it has a 10 year expiration too.
10 years? Not according to this:
Expires: 2011-08-21
Updated: 2009-08-22
http://whois.domaintools.com/automatedoutlet.com

And what does GoDaddy do with auto-renewals? wait until the last day to attempt to run your credit card? I would have hoped they would have contacted you well before it expired and they hosed you.

EDIT: I guess I was looking at slow-to-update whois info. GoDaddy now shows it renewed for 10 years today.
http://who.godaddy.com/WhoIs.aspx?domain=a...prog_id=godaddy

But GoDaddy still stinks if they don't notify you in advance that your CC on file has expired.... lame.
 
They do wait until the last day (which is ok with me, since they always have coupons which can save you a lot of money, so manual renewal is much cheaper). They do send e-mails out in advance (multiple times) letting you know that your domain is expiring.
 
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