The NTIA's decision to disallow private domain name registrations for .us domains threatens your privacy Return to Home

An Online Fraud Victim

The nature of my business causes me to spend a lot of time on the Internet; as a result, I often sign up for newsletters and post comments on public forums. Little did I know that simply putting my email address out on the Web would cause me such grief.

What happened was that someone took my personalized email address and then looked up the Whois information associated with my domain name to make purchases online. How did they do that? Well, some underhanded person (or persons) figured out a credit card company's algorithm for issuing card numbers. So they generated a credit card number and then used it in conjunction with the personal information they obtained from my Whois record. When they made the purchases online, all the online store saw was an apparently good card number associated with accurate card holder information. The result: the online store processed the order. (Of course, those thieves had the goods shipped to a PO Box).

Not long after, I began to receive phone calls from different merchants regarding purchases made on their site. I didn't know what was going on, and was very confused as to how these merchants had all my personal information. Luckily, I quickly figured out the cause of my identity theft, and immediately made all my domains private. I continue to surf the web and post on public forums; but at least now, I know my postings won't come back to hurt me.

Email Your Elected Officials

Tell your elected offical how you feel about your right to privacy. It's their job to represent you and your interests.

Sign the Petition

Take immediate action and join the ranks of those who will stand up for their right to privacy.


NTIA Letters and Agreements

View the letters and new agreements issued by the NTIA and NeuStar in order to eliminate privacy on .US domain names. Also see the chronology of how .US private registrations were eliminated.

How .US Privacy Was Eliminated

NTIA Response to Congressional Inquiries

Case Studies

Stories of citizens who absolutely must have Whois privacy:

A Battered & Stalked Woman

A Rape Victim

A Businessman

A Political Activist

An Online Fraud Victim

A Credit Card Theft Victim

A Father Harrassed by Fanatics

The Whistleblower

The At-Home Worker

Press and Documentation

Why privacy makes the Internet safer. How anonymity hides the bad guys!

Domain Owners Lose Privacy - Wired.com

Go Daddy slams US on domain privacy - Computer Business Review Online

Ruling on '.us' Domain Raises Privacy Issues - washingtonpost.com