They started promos knowing that it will end bad for their new customers. And they closed the doors on twitter and facebook first to cover their backs. Last point on their todo list was informing their customers. Reckless double dealers.Ouch < 2 hours notices... These fools knew of inevitable doom for months. Dirt-fucking-bags.
To Whom It May Concern
Shard Hosting Solutions Limited
Thank you for your recent email. We were asked to undertake a review of the financial affairs if the company and following the review it was evident that the company did not have sufficient cash resources to continue trading. Our advice therefore was for the company to cease trading as soon as possible.
Application for Refunds
Any person allegedly due a refund for prepaid services is effectively an unsecured creditor of the company. There are insufficient funds to meet the liabilities due to unsecured creditors and therefore no refunds will be possible.
There being no assets or funds available it is unlikely that the company will enter into a formal insolvency procedure.
Further action for recovery of alleged refunds will therefore prove futile.
Server Requirements and Back Up.
The director has asked us to issue the following statement:-
“Under the terms of service you are responsible for your own data and backups. It was hoped that you would have had longer to take any additional backups you may require; however, upstream providers made a decision to withdraw their services as soon as the announcement was made that the company had ceased trading. European services should be reachable for backup collection; you should take a copy of the data immediately as the length of time that these will be available is uncertain”.
We cannot offer any further information at this present time.
Yours faithfully
Baverstocks
If they'd reached the point of trading insolvently, then the directors are obliged to cease operations immediately.You can't just shut/close a Ltd company (cease trading) when there are debts and expect to get away with it.
With no assets, unless you can prove they deliberately traded fraudulently (notoriously hard to do), it's impossible to get anything as a creditor.That being said, there are still ways to ensure you get money back though I would imagine it'll only be worth the time and effort for those who have a lot of money to recover.
Or it could be a god idea for the datacenter in which owns the servers to do them a solid by simply turning them back on for 24 hours, allowing the clients in question an opportunity to get their data.Edit: Might be an idea for the affected clients to get together and get the servers brought back online for a short period to get their data back or even, as a collective, keep them online.
Historically, these CC deadpoolers would quickly get absorbed into CVPS. But it looks like Fabozzi hasn't made a move to "buy" (haha, right) the leased gear.. Nor has a "new brand" suddenly sprung up to take over. I'm finding that far more interesting right now than the initial situation.Clientbase however is an asset, so unless it was very small, it's suprising there wasnt an attempt to sell that off and provide a transition period.
Indeed - it reminds me of a certain spongebob plan... and I'm sure you know what I'm talking about as we both frequent that particular resource.If they'd reached the point of trading insolvently, then the directors are obliged to cease operations immediately.
From a read of the accountants response it sounds like a typical insolvency practitioners reply, and it's 'game over' for the clients.
Clientbase however is an asset, so unless it was very small, it's suprising there wasnt an attempt to sell that off and provide a transition period.
I've looked at 2 'going out of business' hosts this week witha view to taking on the clients so they continue to get service(s) so it looks like we're going to see the usual number of Quarter-4 failures
With no assets, unless you can prove they deliberately traded fraudulently (notoriously hard to do), it's impossible to get anything as a creditor.
It's always possible. Leaseweb did this twice but then again, leaseweb is on a completely different scale than CC or 99% of the providers in this market. LW turning those people up likely cost them only a little bit on power, where as Jon has to deal with the possibility that it'll spike his 95% enough that he'll have to pay money for that good deed.Or it could be a god idea for the datacenter in which owns the servers to do them a solid by simply turning them back on for 24 hours, allowing the clients in question an opportunity to get their data.
Note the bolding.ShardHost have been featured on LowEndBox twice before. Marc tells us that on their last offer, they were inundated with signups, picking up nearly “1000 happy clients” as a result of being featured on here. They’re using Supermicro Servers with the Intel E3 1240v3 and 6 x Intel 520 SSDs with the Raid 10 LSI 9271 8i with Cachevault. The infamous DD test is apparently pushing 1.4-1.5 GB/s! These servers are owned by shard host and colocated with Colocrossing. ShardHost is a registered UK company (reg 07679837), who have been in business since June 2011. Reviews on their previous posts have been pretty decent.
Legally, ShardHost/Bakerwhateverthefuck can't do that unfortunately.Chris posted on. LET that he were trying to contact Sarah for a buyout or atleast try to get something from the leftovers.
Sadly too true.It just sucks for the end user
The 520's are still good drives. I was planning to use them for our SSD upgrades if they still made the bigger models." By June they were moved into ColoCrossing Dallas supposedly using the same equipment"
Seemingly the same equipment.
I didn't see SSDs in their offers prior to CC. And we know how CC loves those old 520's.
Wonder where the "owned" servers went?