Can someone read my E-Mail if I lose ownership of my domain?












29














Let's assume I have a server set up with an email address like me@mydomain.tld. Now I have distributed my business card with the e-mail address to all people all over the world and they keep sending me confidential emails. But now I don't feel like paying for the domain mydomain.tld anymore.



Now if someone buys the domain and creates a mx record pointing to the his own mail server he can read all my confidential emails the people are sending me right?



No, I can't tell them to stop sending confidential mails because I can't contact them.



Are there ways to prevent that or is the only option I have is to pay for the domain until I die?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Skiddie Hunter is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 1




    How much is your domain costing you every year?
    – forest
    yesterday








  • 3




    About $14. Still pretty much for a student. But thanks for your answer. I'll probably pay for it another 5 years and then I'm gonna let it expire.
    – Skiddie Hunter
    yesterday






  • 15




    $14 a year is nothing. Paying $140 over a period of 10 years is nothing (you won't be a student forever!). Forgo a cup of coffee during one day only once every three months and it'll pay for itself indefinitely.
    – forest
    yesterday








  • 2




    That's £10 a year, basically two (maybe three) pints a year. A year! As forest says, it's a really low cost and trivial to recoup. Just stick with it!
    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    22 hours ago








  • 5




    @SkiddieHunter For sending credit card information e-mail was never an advisable choice. A website should use HTTP GET/POST over TLS for exchanging credit card information. And for a side business while you're a student, you really should probably use something more like PayPal where you never need to know or touch customers' credit card info at all. Even if you continue to own the domain, e-mail has never been a secure way to exchange information. It's generally unencrypted and viewable by anyone anywhere along the transmission path. Also, SMTP is about 37 years old, not over 50. :)
    – reirab
    19 hours ago


















29














Let's assume I have a server set up with an email address like me@mydomain.tld. Now I have distributed my business card with the e-mail address to all people all over the world and they keep sending me confidential emails. But now I don't feel like paying for the domain mydomain.tld anymore.



Now if someone buys the domain and creates a mx record pointing to the his own mail server he can read all my confidential emails the people are sending me right?



No, I can't tell them to stop sending confidential mails because I can't contact them.



Are there ways to prevent that or is the only option I have is to pay for the domain until I die?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Skiddie Hunter is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1




    How much is your domain costing you every year?
    – forest
    yesterday








  • 3




    About $14. Still pretty much for a student. But thanks for your answer. I'll probably pay for it another 5 years and then I'm gonna let it expire.
    – Skiddie Hunter
    yesterday






  • 15




    $14 a year is nothing. Paying $140 over a period of 10 years is nothing (you won't be a student forever!). Forgo a cup of coffee during one day only once every three months and it'll pay for itself indefinitely.
    – forest
    yesterday








  • 2




    That's £10 a year, basically two (maybe three) pints a year. A year! As forest says, it's a really low cost and trivial to recoup. Just stick with it!
    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    22 hours ago








  • 5




    @SkiddieHunter For sending credit card information e-mail was never an advisable choice. A website should use HTTP GET/POST over TLS for exchanging credit card information. And for a side business while you're a student, you really should probably use something more like PayPal where you never need to know or touch customers' credit card info at all. Even if you continue to own the domain, e-mail has never been a secure way to exchange information. It's generally unencrypted and viewable by anyone anywhere along the transmission path. Also, SMTP is about 37 years old, not over 50. :)
    – reirab
    19 hours ago
















29












29








29


3





Let's assume I have a server set up with an email address like me@mydomain.tld. Now I have distributed my business card with the e-mail address to all people all over the world and they keep sending me confidential emails. But now I don't feel like paying for the domain mydomain.tld anymore.



Now if someone buys the domain and creates a mx record pointing to the his own mail server he can read all my confidential emails the people are sending me right?



No, I can't tell them to stop sending confidential mails because I can't contact them.



Are there ways to prevent that or is the only option I have is to pay for the domain until I die?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Skiddie Hunter is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











Let's assume I have a server set up with an email address like me@mydomain.tld. Now I have distributed my business card with the e-mail address to all people all over the world and they keep sending me confidential emails. But now I don't feel like paying for the domain mydomain.tld anymore.



Now if someone buys the domain and creates a mx record pointing to the his own mail server he can read all my confidential emails the people are sending me right?



No, I can't tell them to stop sending confidential mails because I can't contact them.



Are there ways to prevent that or is the only option I have is to pay for the domain until I die?







email domain






share|improve this question









New contributor




Skiddie Hunter is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Skiddie Hunter is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 17 mins ago









Mawg

698724




698724






New contributor




Skiddie Hunter is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked yesterday









Skiddie Hunter

14829




14829




New contributor




Skiddie Hunter is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Skiddie Hunter is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Skiddie Hunter is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 1




    How much is your domain costing you every year?
    – forest
    yesterday








  • 3




    About $14. Still pretty much for a student. But thanks for your answer. I'll probably pay for it another 5 years and then I'm gonna let it expire.
    – Skiddie Hunter
    yesterday






  • 15




    $14 a year is nothing. Paying $140 over a period of 10 years is nothing (you won't be a student forever!). Forgo a cup of coffee during one day only once every three months and it'll pay for itself indefinitely.
    – forest
    yesterday








  • 2




    That's £10 a year, basically two (maybe three) pints a year. A year! As forest says, it's a really low cost and trivial to recoup. Just stick with it!
    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    22 hours ago








  • 5




    @SkiddieHunter For sending credit card information e-mail was never an advisable choice. A website should use HTTP GET/POST over TLS for exchanging credit card information. And for a side business while you're a student, you really should probably use something more like PayPal where you never need to know or touch customers' credit card info at all. Even if you continue to own the domain, e-mail has never been a secure way to exchange information. It's generally unencrypted and viewable by anyone anywhere along the transmission path. Also, SMTP is about 37 years old, not over 50. :)
    – reirab
    19 hours ago
















  • 1




    How much is your domain costing you every year?
    – forest
    yesterday








  • 3




    About $14. Still pretty much for a student. But thanks for your answer. I'll probably pay for it another 5 years and then I'm gonna let it expire.
    – Skiddie Hunter
    yesterday






  • 15




    $14 a year is nothing. Paying $140 over a period of 10 years is nothing (you won't be a student forever!). Forgo a cup of coffee during one day only once every three months and it'll pay for itself indefinitely.
    – forest
    yesterday








  • 2




    That's £10 a year, basically two (maybe three) pints a year. A year! As forest says, it's a really low cost and trivial to recoup. Just stick with it!
    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    22 hours ago








  • 5




    @SkiddieHunter For sending credit card information e-mail was never an advisable choice. A website should use HTTP GET/POST over TLS for exchanging credit card information. And for a side business while you're a student, you really should probably use something more like PayPal where you never need to know or touch customers' credit card info at all. Even if you continue to own the domain, e-mail has never been a secure way to exchange information. It's generally unencrypted and viewable by anyone anywhere along the transmission path. Also, SMTP is about 37 years old, not over 50. :)
    – reirab
    19 hours ago










1




1




How much is your domain costing you every year?
– forest
yesterday






How much is your domain costing you every year?
– forest
yesterday






3




3




About $14. Still pretty much for a student. But thanks for your answer. I'll probably pay for it another 5 years and then I'm gonna let it expire.
– Skiddie Hunter
yesterday




About $14. Still pretty much for a student. But thanks for your answer. I'll probably pay for it another 5 years and then I'm gonna let it expire.
– Skiddie Hunter
yesterday




15




15




$14 a year is nothing. Paying $140 over a period of 10 years is nothing (you won't be a student forever!). Forgo a cup of coffee during one day only once every three months and it'll pay for itself indefinitely.
– forest
yesterday






$14 a year is nothing. Paying $140 over a period of 10 years is nothing (you won't be a student forever!). Forgo a cup of coffee during one day only once every three months and it'll pay for itself indefinitely.
– forest
yesterday






2




2




That's £10 a year, basically two (maybe three) pints a year. A year! As forest says, it's a really low cost and trivial to recoup. Just stick with it!
– Lightness Races in Orbit
22 hours ago






That's £10 a year, basically two (maybe three) pints a year. A year! As forest says, it's a really low cost and trivial to recoup. Just stick with it!
– Lightness Races in Orbit
22 hours ago






5




5




@SkiddieHunter For sending credit card information e-mail was never an advisable choice. A website should use HTTP GET/POST over TLS for exchanging credit card information. And for a side business while you're a student, you really should probably use something more like PayPal where you never need to know or touch customers' credit card info at all. Even if you continue to own the domain, e-mail has never been a secure way to exchange information. It's generally unencrypted and viewable by anyone anywhere along the transmission path. Also, SMTP is about 37 years old, not over 50. :)
– reirab
19 hours ago






@SkiddieHunter For sending credit card information e-mail was never an advisable choice. A website should use HTTP GET/POST over TLS for exchanging credit card information. And for a side business while you're a student, you really should probably use something more like PayPal where you never need to know or touch customers' credit card info at all. Even if you continue to own the domain, e-mail has never been a secure way to exchange information. It's generally unencrypted and viewable by anyone anywhere along the transmission path. Also, SMTP is about 37 years old, not over 50. :)
– reirab
19 hours ago












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















47















Now if someone buys the domain and creates a mx record pointing to the his own mail server he can read all my confidential emails the people are sending me right?




If they register the domain name, they will receive all email being sent to it from that point on. They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails. There is nothing to fundamentally prevent this.




Are there ways to prevent that or is the only option I have is to pay for the domain until I die?




You can request that all contacts to you encrypt their communications with PGP using your public key, which will prevent anyone who obtains the domain later from reading new messages, but it requires people actually use PGP, which may not be likely if you are distributing the address to average people in a business card. However, if you maintain or at least renew the domain for, say, 20 years, then what are the chances that anyone is going to seriously send an email to such an ancient address?





I asked the question on the Law Stack Exchange whether or not there would be any legal recourse to someone using your domain, and the answer was no: https://law.stackexchange.com/q/35917/15724






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    Unless OP already happens to have one, registering a trademark costs a lot more than registering a domain.
    – Federico Poloni
    yesterday






  • 3




    @FedericoPoloni You do not need to explicitly register a trademark. Just use the trademark symbol (™) next to a logo or phrase and you will get a certain level of protection in many countries. However, getting a registered trademark (®) does cost money. Lack of a registered trademark might, however, prevent you from seeking damages under 15 U.S. Code § 1117 in the USA, and protections would be weaker. See also here.
    – forest
    yesterday








  • 2




    Trademark protection against other people registering a domain has its limits. It will work against lego.newtld as Lego is a world wide brand and a registered trademark, though they might have to claim it when newtld is created to be sure to have it. It might not work with speterson.com, even if there is a company called Speterson with a trademark. If Steven Peterson registers it and uses it for something that is not in conflict with that trademark the Speterson company will not have an easy case.
    – Bent
    yesterday






  • 3




    "They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails." That statement should come with a bit of a caveat. Suppose OP has a webmail account somewhere, which is tied to this domain for password recovery purposes. Unless OP makes very sure to remove that e-mail address from the webmail account recovery process, having control of the domain may allow an attacker to take control over the webmail account, thus enabling access to any old e-mails stored in the webmail account. Now, is this a particularly likely scenario? I'd say no. But it's possible.
    – a CVn
    19 hours ago








  • 2




    @hiburn8 That is incorrect. There is a domain name dispute process specifically for cases like that, and bad-faith use of a domain (selling fake lego from lego.com, for example), is explicitly a reason for a domain name to be taken away from its current owner.
    – mbrig
    15 hours ago



















15














As others already mentioned: Yes keeping a domain name is the only way to be sure that nobody is going to receive emails sent to there.



That being said:



Just keeping a domain is often cheaper than using it



Of course everything depends on the provider, but as I understand you currently have currently more than 1 service (domain name, redirect?, email server?, hosting space?).



When your only objective is to prevent others from receiving your emails, it is sufficient to only renew the domain name, and you can avoid the costs for any further service.






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    2 Answers
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    47















    Now if someone buys the domain and creates a mx record pointing to the his own mail server he can read all my confidential emails the people are sending me right?




    If they register the domain name, they will receive all email being sent to it from that point on. They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails. There is nothing to fundamentally prevent this.




    Are there ways to prevent that or is the only option I have is to pay for the domain until I die?




    You can request that all contacts to you encrypt their communications with PGP using your public key, which will prevent anyone who obtains the domain later from reading new messages, but it requires people actually use PGP, which may not be likely if you are distributing the address to average people in a business card. However, if you maintain or at least renew the domain for, say, 20 years, then what are the chances that anyone is going to seriously send an email to such an ancient address?





    I asked the question on the Law Stack Exchange whether or not there would be any legal recourse to someone using your domain, and the answer was no: https://law.stackexchange.com/q/35917/15724






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2




      Unless OP already happens to have one, registering a trademark costs a lot more than registering a domain.
      – Federico Poloni
      yesterday






    • 3




      @FedericoPoloni You do not need to explicitly register a trademark. Just use the trademark symbol (™) next to a logo or phrase and you will get a certain level of protection in many countries. However, getting a registered trademark (®) does cost money. Lack of a registered trademark might, however, prevent you from seeking damages under 15 U.S. Code § 1117 in the USA, and protections would be weaker. See also here.
      – forest
      yesterday








    • 2




      Trademark protection against other people registering a domain has its limits. It will work against lego.newtld as Lego is a world wide brand and a registered trademark, though they might have to claim it when newtld is created to be sure to have it. It might not work with speterson.com, even if there is a company called Speterson with a trademark. If Steven Peterson registers it and uses it for something that is not in conflict with that trademark the Speterson company will not have an easy case.
      – Bent
      yesterday






    • 3




      "They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails." That statement should come with a bit of a caveat. Suppose OP has a webmail account somewhere, which is tied to this domain for password recovery purposes. Unless OP makes very sure to remove that e-mail address from the webmail account recovery process, having control of the domain may allow an attacker to take control over the webmail account, thus enabling access to any old e-mails stored in the webmail account. Now, is this a particularly likely scenario? I'd say no. But it's possible.
      – a CVn
      19 hours ago








    • 2




      @hiburn8 That is incorrect. There is a domain name dispute process specifically for cases like that, and bad-faith use of a domain (selling fake lego from lego.com, for example), is explicitly a reason for a domain name to be taken away from its current owner.
      – mbrig
      15 hours ago
















    47















    Now if someone buys the domain and creates a mx record pointing to the his own mail server he can read all my confidential emails the people are sending me right?




    If they register the domain name, they will receive all email being sent to it from that point on. They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails. There is nothing to fundamentally prevent this.




    Are there ways to prevent that or is the only option I have is to pay for the domain until I die?




    You can request that all contacts to you encrypt their communications with PGP using your public key, which will prevent anyone who obtains the domain later from reading new messages, but it requires people actually use PGP, which may not be likely if you are distributing the address to average people in a business card. However, if you maintain or at least renew the domain for, say, 20 years, then what are the chances that anyone is going to seriously send an email to such an ancient address?





    I asked the question on the Law Stack Exchange whether or not there would be any legal recourse to someone using your domain, and the answer was no: https://law.stackexchange.com/q/35917/15724






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2




      Unless OP already happens to have one, registering a trademark costs a lot more than registering a domain.
      – Federico Poloni
      yesterday






    • 3




      @FedericoPoloni You do not need to explicitly register a trademark. Just use the trademark symbol (™) next to a logo or phrase and you will get a certain level of protection in many countries. However, getting a registered trademark (®) does cost money. Lack of a registered trademark might, however, prevent you from seeking damages under 15 U.S. Code § 1117 in the USA, and protections would be weaker. See also here.
      – forest
      yesterday








    • 2




      Trademark protection against other people registering a domain has its limits. It will work against lego.newtld as Lego is a world wide brand and a registered trademark, though they might have to claim it when newtld is created to be sure to have it. It might not work with speterson.com, even if there is a company called Speterson with a trademark. If Steven Peterson registers it and uses it for something that is not in conflict with that trademark the Speterson company will not have an easy case.
      – Bent
      yesterday






    • 3




      "They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails." That statement should come with a bit of a caveat. Suppose OP has a webmail account somewhere, which is tied to this domain for password recovery purposes. Unless OP makes very sure to remove that e-mail address from the webmail account recovery process, having control of the domain may allow an attacker to take control over the webmail account, thus enabling access to any old e-mails stored in the webmail account. Now, is this a particularly likely scenario? I'd say no. But it's possible.
      – a CVn
      19 hours ago








    • 2




      @hiburn8 That is incorrect. There is a domain name dispute process specifically for cases like that, and bad-faith use of a domain (selling fake lego from lego.com, for example), is explicitly a reason for a domain name to be taken away from its current owner.
      – mbrig
      15 hours ago














    47












    47








    47







    Now if someone buys the domain and creates a mx record pointing to the his own mail server he can read all my confidential emails the people are sending me right?




    If they register the domain name, they will receive all email being sent to it from that point on. They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails. There is nothing to fundamentally prevent this.




    Are there ways to prevent that or is the only option I have is to pay for the domain until I die?




    You can request that all contacts to you encrypt their communications with PGP using your public key, which will prevent anyone who obtains the domain later from reading new messages, but it requires people actually use PGP, which may not be likely if you are distributing the address to average people in a business card. However, if you maintain or at least renew the domain for, say, 20 years, then what are the chances that anyone is going to seriously send an email to such an ancient address?





    I asked the question on the Law Stack Exchange whether or not there would be any legal recourse to someone using your domain, and the answer was no: https://law.stackexchange.com/q/35917/15724






    share|improve this answer















    Now if someone buys the domain and creates a mx record pointing to the his own mail server he can read all my confidential emails the people are sending me right?




    If they register the domain name, they will receive all email being sent to it from that point on. They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails. There is nothing to fundamentally prevent this.




    Are there ways to prevent that or is the only option I have is to pay for the domain until I die?




    You can request that all contacts to you encrypt their communications with PGP using your public key, which will prevent anyone who obtains the domain later from reading new messages, but it requires people actually use PGP, which may not be likely if you are distributing the address to average people in a business card. However, if you maintain or at least renew the domain for, say, 20 years, then what are the chances that anyone is going to seriously send an email to such an ancient address?





    I asked the question on the Law Stack Exchange whether or not there would be any legal recourse to someone using your domain, and the answer was no: https://law.stackexchange.com/q/35917/15724







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 7 hours ago

























    answered yesterday









    forest

    32.5k15104110




    32.5k15104110








    • 2




      Unless OP already happens to have one, registering a trademark costs a lot more than registering a domain.
      – Federico Poloni
      yesterday






    • 3




      @FedericoPoloni You do not need to explicitly register a trademark. Just use the trademark symbol (™) next to a logo or phrase and you will get a certain level of protection in many countries. However, getting a registered trademark (®) does cost money. Lack of a registered trademark might, however, prevent you from seeking damages under 15 U.S. Code § 1117 in the USA, and protections would be weaker. See also here.
      – forest
      yesterday








    • 2




      Trademark protection against other people registering a domain has its limits. It will work against lego.newtld as Lego is a world wide brand and a registered trademark, though they might have to claim it when newtld is created to be sure to have it. It might not work with speterson.com, even if there is a company called Speterson with a trademark. If Steven Peterson registers it and uses it for something that is not in conflict with that trademark the Speterson company will not have an easy case.
      – Bent
      yesterday






    • 3




      "They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails." That statement should come with a bit of a caveat. Suppose OP has a webmail account somewhere, which is tied to this domain for password recovery purposes. Unless OP makes very sure to remove that e-mail address from the webmail account recovery process, having control of the domain may allow an attacker to take control over the webmail account, thus enabling access to any old e-mails stored in the webmail account. Now, is this a particularly likely scenario? I'd say no. But it's possible.
      – a CVn
      19 hours ago








    • 2




      @hiburn8 That is incorrect. There is a domain name dispute process specifically for cases like that, and bad-faith use of a domain (selling fake lego from lego.com, for example), is explicitly a reason for a domain name to be taken away from its current owner.
      – mbrig
      15 hours ago














    • 2




      Unless OP already happens to have one, registering a trademark costs a lot more than registering a domain.
      – Federico Poloni
      yesterday






    • 3




      @FedericoPoloni You do not need to explicitly register a trademark. Just use the trademark symbol (™) next to a logo or phrase and you will get a certain level of protection in many countries. However, getting a registered trademark (®) does cost money. Lack of a registered trademark might, however, prevent you from seeking damages under 15 U.S. Code § 1117 in the USA, and protections would be weaker. See also here.
      – forest
      yesterday








    • 2




      Trademark protection against other people registering a domain has its limits. It will work against lego.newtld as Lego is a world wide brand and a registered trademark, though they might have to claim it when newtld is created to be sure to have it. It might not work with speterson.com, even if there is a company called Speterson with a trademark. If Steven Peterson registers it and uses it for something that is not in conflict with that trademark the Speterson company will not have an easy case.
      – Bent
      yesterday






    • 3




      "They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails." That statement should come with a bit of a caveat. Suppose OP has a webmail account somewhere, which is tied to this domain for password recovery purposes. Unless OP makes very sure to remove that e-mail address from the webmail account recovery process, having control of the domain may allow an attacker to take control over the webmail account, thus enabling access to any old e-mails stored in the webmail account. Now, is this a particularly likely scenario? I'd say no. But it's possible.
      – a CVn
      19 hours ago








    • 2




      @hiburn8 That is incorrect. There is a domain name dispute process specifically for cases like that, and bad-faith use of a domain (selling fake lego from lego.com, for example), is explicitly a reason for a domain name to be taken away from its current owner.
      – mbrig
      15 hours ago








    2




    2




    Unless OP already happens to have one, registering a trademark costs a lot more than registering a domain.
    – Federico Poloni
    yesterday




    Unless OP already happens to have one, registering a trademark costs a lot more than registering a domain.
    – Federico Poloni
    yesterday




    3




    3




    @FedericoPoloni You do not need to explicitly register a trademark. Just use the trademark symbol (™) next to a logo or phrase and you will get a certain level of protection in many countries. However, getting a registered trademark (®) does cost money. Lack of a registered trademark might, however, prevent you from seeking damages under 15 U.S. Code § 1117 in the USA, and protections would be weaker. See also here.
    – forest
    yesterday






    @FedericoPoloni You do not need to explicitly register a trademark. Just use the trademark symbol (™) next to a logo or phrase and you will get a certain level of protection in many countries. However, getting a registered trademark (®) does cost money. Lack of a registered trademark might, however, prevent you from seeking damages under 15 U.S. Code § 1117 in the USA, and protections would be weaker. See also here.
    – forest
    yesterday






    2




    2




    Trademark protection against other people registering a domain has its limits. It will work against lego.newtld as Lego is a world wide brand and a registered trademark, though they might have to claim it when newtld is created to be sure to have it. It might not work with speterson.com, even if there is a company called Speterson with a trademark. If Steven Peterson registers it and uses it for something that is not in conflict with that trademark the Speterson company will not have an easy case.
    – Bent
    yesterday




    Trademark protection against other people registering a domain has its limits. It will work against lego.newtld as Lego is a world wide brand and a registered trademark, though they might have to claim it when newtld is created to be sure to have it. It might not work with speterson.com, even if there is a company called Speterson with a trademark. If Steven Peterson registers it and uses it for something that is not in conflict with that trademark the Speterson company will not have an easy case.
    – Bent
    yesterday




    3




    3




    "They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails." That statement should come with a bit of a caveat. Suppose OP has a webmail account somewhere, which is tied to this domain for password recovery purposes. Unless OP makes very sure to remove that e-mail address from the webmail account recovery process, having control of the domain may allow an attacker to take control over the webmail account, thus enabling access to any old e-mails stored in the webmail account. Now, is this a particularly likely scenario? I'd say no. But it's possible.
    – a CVn
    19 hours ago






    "They will not have retroactive access to previously sent emails." That statement should come with a bit of a caveat. Suppose OP has a webmail account somewhere, which is tied to this domain for password recovery purposes. Unless OP makes very sure to remove that e-mail address from the webmail account recovery process, having control of the domain may allow an attacker to take control over the webmail account, thus enabling access to any old e-mails stored in the webmail account. Now, is this a particularly likely scenario? I'd say no. But it's possible.
    – a CVn
    19 hours ago






    2




    2




    @hiburn8 That is incorrect. There is a domain name dispute process specifically for cases like that, and bad-faith use of a domain (selling fake lego from lego.com, for example), is explicitly a reason for a domain name to be taken away from its current owner.
    – mbrig
    15 hours ago




    @hiburn8 That is incorrect. There is a domain name dispute process specifically for cases like that, and bad-faith use of a domain (selling fake lego from lego.com, for example), is explicitly a reason for a domain name to be taken away from its current owner.
    – mbrig
    15 hours ago













    15














    As others already mentioned: Yes keeping a domain name is the only way to be sure that nobody is going to receive emails sent to there.



    That being said:



    Just keeping a domain is often cheaper than using it



    Of course everything depends on the provider, but as I understand you currently have currently more than 1 service (domain name, redirect?, email server?, hosting space?).



    When your only objective is to prevent others from receiving your emails, it is sufficient to only renew the domain name, and you can avoid the costs for any further service.






    share|improve this answer


























      15














      As others already mentioned: Yes keeping a domain name is the only way to be sure that nobody is going to receive emails sent to there.



      That being said:



      Just keeping a domain is often cheaper than using it



      Of course everything depends on the provider, but as I understand you currently have currently more than 1 service (domain name, redirect?, email server?, hosting space?).



      When your only objective is to prevent others from receiving your emails, it is sufficient to only renew the domain name, and you can avoid the costs for any further service.






      share|improve this answer
























        15












        15








        15






        As others already mentioned: Yes keeping a domain name is the only way to be sure that nobody is going to receive emails sent to there.



        That being said:



        Just keeping a domain is often cheaper than using it



        Of course everything depends on the provider, but as I understand you currently have currently more than 1 service (domain name, redirect?, email server?, hosting space?).



        When your only objective is to prevent others from receiving your emails, it is sufficient to only renew the domain name, and you can avoid the costs for any further service.






        share|improve this answer












        As others already mentioned: Yes keeping a domain name is the only way to be sure that nobody is going to receive emails sent to there.



        That being said:



        Just keeping a domain is often cheaper than using it



        Of course everything depends on the provider, but as I understand you currently have currently more than 1 service (domain name, redirect?, email server?, hosting space?).



        When your only objective is to prevent others from receiving your emails, it is sufficient to only renew the domain name, and you can avoid the costs for any further service.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 22 hours ago









        Dennis Jaheruddin

        1,003713




        1,003713






















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