Stolen Domains Warning! October 15, 2007
Posted by domaininvesting in Stolen Domains.Tags: Stolen Domains
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The following domains have been blacklisted:
jgf.net, krj.net, kxr.net, onv.net, pxg.net, xgt.net, yio.net
Do not attempt to buy or sell these domains, chances are you will lose your money!
The scammer also owns: pte.net, oty.net
Scammer Details:
Aram Foroud Ghadiri aka Aram Ford aka Masoud Foroud
“General Manager” of SunnyMajorca.com
Easy Bed SL
Paseo de Illetas, 39
Palma de Mallorca, Baleares 07181
Spain
PayPal: rachaelbrowne@yahoo.com
Website: www.sunnymajorca.com
Other related addresses:
FOROUD GHADIRI, ARAM
13114 Conifer rd.
HOUSTON, TX 77079
US
5718 WESTHEIMER STE 600
HOUSTON, TX 77057
2411 Fountain View Dr
Houston, TX 77057
RAMON DE MONCADA 35
PALMA DE MALLORCA, BALEARES 07180
ES
Updated Blacklist of Stolen Domains
If someone steals something of value here in the states we call the police and they take a statement and initiate an investigation. Sometimes the property is recovered and the thief prosecuted. All this is undertaken without cost locally and without attorneys or empaneled “impartial” arbiters.
If however someone working at Godaddy a U.S. company steals a domain from a customer in the U.S. the victim can’t call the police because unlike all other thefts this one falls under some obscure remote little known foreign body located on the other side of the planet where really good chocolate comes from. Now here we have a U.S. crime and a U.S. victim yet the victim cannot remedy the crime in his or her own country. The process of recovering a stolen domain involves the hiring of an attorney that specializes in domain theft and bloated ICANN rules and procedures. This attorney will then send a warning letter to the offending basically requesting that they not continue their naughtiness and to return the stolen domain. If after some statutory period of time the crook fails to change his evil ways then the victim can escalate the process by paying ICANN to empanel a few objective justice seekers to take the helm. Now from here who knows what will transpire but the victim will wind up paying thousands of dollars to recover a ten dollar domain. There is something seriously wrong with this bizarre and counter intuitive process that needs to be completely revamped. Seriously could this goofy process be any more arcane or asinine? I think not. Sorry I am an engineer and I can’t seem to adapt to nonsensical impractical conditions. I always assume that systems evolve and improve according to a Darwinian like model. If Darwin was faced with recovering a stolen domain he would have shredded his works and let man know that his days were numbered as evolution would cease at the monolith called ICANN.
Jack Durban, victim of domain theft and ICANN ineptness and obsolescence.
I got it back! The thief transferred it back to me after a guilt attack.
Miracles do happen!