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Originally Posted by freecartoonporn
host is outside US, ...
how would i know if they have false information, they are using privacy protect service.
what if while case is ongoing they chnage/switch the domain ?
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Us the privacy company in the USA or the same country you will file a lawsuit in? Join the privacy address advocate company as a Defendant, to the lawsuit, they will roll over on their client>>?
Quote:
Piercing the Veil
A civil complainant needs a method for reaching
an infringer other than the subpoena
process, which gives the infringer a heads-up
notice and time to move its activities to
another location on the Internet. Fortunately
for complainants, there is a way to ensure
almost immediate disclosure of a domain
owner?s true identity. This method is derived
from a policy that appears common to private
registration services: Once a legal process is
initiated against a service, it will substitute its
customer?s contact information into the Whois
database in place of its own to protect itself
from liability
http://www.lacba.org/Files/LAL/Vol29No2/2249.pdf
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Here are some interesting ideas
NameCheap Sued Over WhoisGuard | Domain Name Wire
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It?s common for someone to name a domain name registrar or whois privacy service in a lawsuit as a way to get the actual registrant disclosed. That might be all that Emergency Essentials wants here regarding the domain name theemergencyessentials.com.
But the plaintiff claims that WhoisGuard was not responsive to its earlier inquiries. It faxed and mailed a cease and desist letter to the whois privacy address in January. The fax was allegedly delivered but the certified letter was returned undeliverable. No one responded to the letters.
Then in March Emergency Essentials sent a cease & desist letter directly to NameCheap.
In its suit, Emergency Essentials writes:
As of the filing of the present litigation, WhoisGuard had failed to identify any other owner of the website. Therefore, WhoisGuard is responsible for the content of the website
The company also named web host BlueHost in its complaint.
Responding to the suit won?t be free. And thus, providing whois privacy services isn?t free.
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For discussion purposes only -- not legal advice.