Grant & all - if it‘s a .de domain name one does not need a privacy service any longer since 2018(?) as the GDPR (or its interpretation) mandates that holder data must not be available via WHOIS to the general public.
I would not be surprised if that‘d hold true for all ccTLDs where the GDPR is applicable. Best, -C. > Am 19.10.2022 um 17:23 schrieb Grant Taylor via mailop <mailop@mailop.org>: > > On 10/19/22 7:25 AM, Johann Haarhoff via mailop wrote: > T-Online: >> the IP address <IP> is delegated to your provider and there is no owner data >> in the public whois record for your domain. Thus, the person or company who >> is responsible for this host is essentially anonymous to third parties. >> >> Therefore we would expect that there is a page giving full contact details >> which can be reached via http://<domain> or http://www.<domain> > > Do you use privacy options in WhoIs for your domain name? Since you > (understandably) obfuscated your domain name I can't check. > > I wonder if having real, non-privacy options, in a domain name helps with > this. > > > > -- > Grant. . . . > unix || die > > _______________________________________________ > mailop mailing list > mailop@mailop.org > https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop _______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop