Archive for the 'Community' Category

A finger to the MPAA.

Tuesday, May 1st, 2007

09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0.

MPAA is trying to get this number “censored” and sending takedown notices to anyone hosting it, ranging from simple Blogs to Digg news items. Here’s a hint- numbers can’t be censored, or trademarked - this is actually one of the reasons the Pentium trademark was born(instead of a 586), because numbers are hard to “defend” as intelletctual property of any kind, and certainly as an encryption key, which is a natural use for a number - a mathematical operation.

Quoting an awesome Slashdot comment …

This is merely a very famous (from now on, hint, hint) number theory curiosity:

09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0

is the hexadecimal representation (with leading zero to round off to 32 hex digits) of

13256278887989457651018865901401704640 decimal

which amazingly enough, is equal to the huge prime number

13256278887989457651018865901401704613 + 3^3 (i.e. + 27)

Astonishingly, the next prime after that is only 31 away, so our famous number can also be represented as

13256278887989457651018865901401704671 - 31

It is also very interesting because it is also equal to the product of the following prime numbers:

2^6 * 5 * 19 * 12043 * 216493 * 836256503069278983442067

Truthfully, when was the last time you saw any remotely similar number? Never, right? We better record this for mathematical posterity!!! :-)

Getting the B166ER.com Domain name …

Friday, November 3rd, 2006

…Back .

Registering the B166er.com domain

The domain b166er.com was registered on April 27, 2004 through Dotster . Not that I had any special plans for it , just seemed like a nice idea to own a domain name(d ) after the one robot that just didn’t want to die, the robot that has initiated the chain reaction that brought the human race to it’s knees in the Matrix series.

Loosing the B166er.com domain

A year has passed, I haven’t done anything with the domain, but I was in a rather complex situation personally and financially, and simply forgot to renew the domain, effectively losing it to one of those domain-hoarding companies that monetize such names by putting ads and directories on the expired domain’s pages. It’s a rather big industry , fitting somewhere between typosquatting and domain parking. It my eyes, it’s a sort of legitimate Cybersquatting, they get to use the domain name after it expires, and sometimes get to cash in when someone wants to either purchase or the original owner wants to get it back from them.

Getting It Back

Time has passed, and I decided I want my domain name back. I checked the WhoIs records , and to my very pleasant surprise, the domain record was pending deletition(PendingDelete) and there was nothing on its homepage.
I wanted to make sure I get the domain as soon as it becomes available. Having no idea how to do this, I turned to what seemed like professionals, GoDaddy Inc, and place the following order:

1 DomainAlert Backordering $18.99
B166ER.COM
1 TDNAM Membership w/
DomainAlert. Pro Monitoring
$0.00
1 TDNAM Membership $0.00
1 DomainAlert(R) Pro Monitoring
- 100 Pack
$0.00

Subtotal: $18.99
Shipping & Handling: $0.00
Tax: $0.00
Total: $18.99

Sounds cool, doesn’t it? DomainAlert Promonitoring, and costs a whooping 19$, more than a two-year domain registration. Not a high price to pay to get my domain back at all, and I don’t even have to waste my time on emails or negotiations, pay and forget kind of service . Too bad it didn’t work.

“This notification is generated automatically as a service to you because you subscribe to DomainAlert®.
We’re sorry, but the following domain name(s) that you backordered was not captured successfully:

And there was no refund.

I apologize the backorder attempt has failed. Currently the backorder as submitted as requested therefore it is not eligable for a refund. You may change the backorder for another domain if you would like.

The easiest 18.99$ GoDaddy ever made.
Not giving up, I went to seek an advice on the Digital Point forums, asking if someone could point me in the right direction so I will get my domain name back. And point they did - A good man named BlitzOnline pointed me to

SnapNames
And they were actually having an auction for this domain name. Being taught the GoDaddy lesson, I read the not-so-small print first:

  • No Up-front Cost: All fees are due on delivery. Bidding is free.
  • Simple, Least-Cost Bidding: Set the most you are willing to pay, and our system will bid for you, entering the least amount necessary to maintain your winning status, but never more than your limit.
  • Automatic Notification: You will be notified by email about each important event, such as auction won, auction starting, or if you are outbid.

So I went in, placed the lowest possible initial bid of 30$, and just 48 hours later and without any other interaction, received an email containing some helpful domain management information and the following notification:

Congratulations! You have successfully acquired the domain name b166er.com.

We have debited your account $30.00, the amount of your winning bid.

Fees for your first year of registration were included in the cost of your purchase.

And this is how I got the B166er.com domain name back.
Hopefully this story will help others make the right decisions when it comes to domain acquisition and backordering. And most important of all, I want to thank the Digital Point community for providing the priceless free advice.
Asking my questions earlier could have saved me 18.99$.

Useful Links : Domain Status Types, SnapNames Partners