Some of the Web's Sketchiest Sites Share an Address in Iceland

5 pointsposted 7 hours ago
by rafram

3 Comments

rafram

7 hours ago

This article barely acknowledges that domain privacy can be useful, even essential, for individuals who want to own domains without exposing their home address online. If law enforcement needs to know who controls a Namecheap domain, they can subpoena Namecheap. It doesn’t need to be public information.

larrybud

6 hours ago

Agreed; the article is very one sided and also get some of the fundamentals wrong (for example, it uses the term “web sites” when it should be talking about domains)

It also fails to draw any analogy between domain privacy services and real world analogies such as using LLCs.

rafram

5 hours ago

Right.

If this fearmongering leads to the death of domain privacy (and I do think media campaigns like this often precede and foreshadow legislative campaigns), individuals who own domains will just be forced to create dummy business entities in some cheap jurisdiction in order to keep their info private. Hardly a win for law and order.