staticsafe
New Member
They already support two factor authentication using TOTP.Nice
add 2 factor authentication login support that links to a registered mobile number and also do push notifications to mobile at preset threshold percentages too![]()
They already support two factor authentication using TOTP.Nice
add 2 factor authentication login support that links to a registered mobile number and also do push notifications to mobile at preset threshold percentages too![]()
Why aren't you shutting off small debtors before they become big debtors instead of complaining about them and giving them the freedom to rack up more debt?Howdy
First of all as stated in LET thread the DNS is just one part of our business. @texteditor please read whole thread (and previous ones [like this http://lowendtalk.com/discussion/10223/unprofessional-business-clients-partners#latest]) and you will see that:
1. "We do not chase small amounts (like 2-3€), I agree that's not worth. But 10-15 customers with unpaid 50€ and more gives you significant amount of money worth taking care of."
2. "It's sad that we need to chase people (including few LET users) for few Euro." was sai partialy in context of this and my previous thread (see #1).
I'm willing to bet !00% of the people who "owe" you money have never paid you a dime before, you just refuse to take a stance past going directly to debt collectors after you let the issue worsen.3. Fact: 99.5% of our profit comes from flat fee based business accounts,
4. Fact: beside DNS we operate 2 more services and run software house
Most businesses that do also check credit reports beforehand and give positive reports back to credit bureaus for good cusomers - you however do no checks but still are opting to use collection agencies (which can negatively hurt one's credit) to go after debtors whose information you do not verify.5. Fact: most of the business use collection agancies on certain point - I was just looking for suggestions as our current one is not the best
I get this, but if this is your plan you should probably rethink it rather than publicly complaining and then doing nothing after they owe you 2 euros, then again when they owe you 3 euros, then again when some owe you 50 euros.6. Fact: that's true that we do not block the users after they exceed the free usage tier and it's 100% by design. The DNS is most crucial part of Internet ecosystem and it must be up and running
This is your choice, but you can't go to collections and put someone at risk of credit ratings damage or dealing with repo men because of the structure of your freemium service.7. "Doing "Freemium" without cutting off heavy free users or asking for a billing method up-front (like AWS) and then going to collection agencies is just shameful though" - I've exaplained why we haven't introduced the creadit card support (it's just to expensive as most of the payment and micro ones). I never said that we plan to go straight to collection agancies so please just stop.
Multiple people pointed out all the apparent flaws last time you complained about many LET-ers owing 2-3 euros each in February, and instead of fixing the business model or at least cutting off the serious offenders, you opted to let them rack up tens of Euros in debt to you, and now are planning to go to collections.8. @texteditor I'm not sure how old are you but there is no need to be rude "because @gbshouse is a fucking moron". It's enough to ask why do we stick to this business model and what our numbers are.

If I racked up 100 euros in debt on this account, would you go to debt collectors after I didn't respond to your emails? Literally none of this is verified. Feel free to unfairly knock down someone's credit score because you can't be bothered to make some necessary concessions in your business model
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You do realize that without verifying someone's ID, you could be screwing over an innocent person that never actually had service with you when you try to sell the debt to a creditor?With every number of customers there some small percent of them which will use fake data or try to cheat, and honestly there is nothing we can do only accept it.
This is much more sensible than all your previous posts on the matter have made your policy out to be.@texteditor - to answer your questions
1. What percentage of these non-payers have any payment history at all with you?
I assume that you are talking about those 10 users which we are "chasing" right now: each of them have at least one month of correct payment history
2. How do you plan on confirming you were given valid information about your customer when you do not have any kind of payment history from them?
We have requested and recived the details from their registrar, we have profile change history and the list of IPs used during registration and logging in to our control panel. We have passed those information to authorities which are working on this issue and they've confirmed the names
3. Are you aware of the consequences that negative changes to a person's credit score, truthfully or falsely created by a debt-holder, can have on said person in the US?
Yes, of course, and we are aware of potential problems which can be related to false information.
Please note one thing: with regular users which have unpaid invoice we always send at least 3 payment reminders, next our finance team is trying to find alternative emails (very often people use dedicated email addresses for DNS purposes which are rarely checked), phone contact or even social media such as FB or Tweeter. If that fails we send information that domain(s) present on the invoice will be removed from our system within 2-3 days. If the invoice amount is significant we try to contact the person next month.
I hope you will be satisfied with those answers.
I agree completely, and I still think he's playing a dangerous gameThat is a lot more sensible than originally made out, yes. I still think you'd save both your users and yourselves a headache though by capping free accounts once they pass the 250k limit, at least for those with unverified payment information. You could even have a switch under payments, "Add credit from this source when I go over my credit balance" or something.
I know at least the clients you say you're talking about here are people abusing your service but I probably wouldn't feel happy paying 50 EUR in overages on an otherwise free service if I was targeted in an attack or something. $10 to someone else could easily cost your clients magnitudes over that in overage charges.
It's not surprising that a low-end priced service pisses people off when they're charged money they're not expecting.
Now that is quite serious. Domain registrar gave you personal details without a court order, and then authorities(what country?) confirmed the names for you. They had to match clients vs IPs from their ISPs. And all that took place without a court order? Because I'm pretty sure nobody in Europe would issue a court order over a few eur or 50eur.We have requested and recived the details from their registrar, we have profile change history and the list of IPs used during registration and logging in to our control panel. We have passed those information to authorities which are working on this issue and they've confirmed the names
HP Cloud DNS - 75+ edge locations using Anycast (service provided by Akamai).So is it just that people want affordable anycast?
Francisco
Me too - he should stop talking...^
Good point: that is a shocking and most likely illegal breach of privacy. I'm wondering about the country and registrar as well.
Good finding.HP Cloud DNS - 75+ edge locations using Anycast (service provided by Akamai).
$0.35 per domain per month. $0.55 per million queries/month for the first billion queries (the query prices are prorated. e.g. domain with 1.1 million queries would be charged $0.605 cents).
http://www.hpcloud.com/products-services/dns