Without warning, they’ve locked the domain, and won’t let me back in. I might have to wait for it to delist so I can re-register it with some registrar who aren’t totally incompetent :(.
Will update when I have the domain back :(.
Without warning, they’ve locked the domain, and won’t let me back in. I might have to wait for it to delist so I can re-register it with some registrar who aren’t totally incompetent :(.
Will update when I have the domain back :(.
sorry to hear about JGF hope it gets back up soon!
you didn’t do anything to cheese off the host did you?
bla, i’m sorry too. Hope it will be back soon, I have one pretty game to upload ;D
I’m kinda sure you already know, but just in case:
In the html-comments there is a phone-number to call.
Riven, I don’t understand you. Are you talking to me?
No, as I didn’t quote you
just replying to the thread.
Take a look at the html-source of http://www.javagamesfactory.org/
No JGF. Boo!
Hey, I only live about 30 miles from GoDaddy’s offices. You should come visit and we could TP their whole complex. What do ya say?

Well, I’m not sure what transaction processing has to do with anything…
Now there’s a joke for programmers, if I ever heard one.
Looks like they commented the phone number out because they got too many phone calls 
Site is still available on IP address:
…and should re-appear at http://javagamesfactory.org within the next 2 days (depending upon your ISP)
FYI: the actual registrar has become / always was a subsidiary of GoDaddy. I never dealt with godaddy, just with the registrar - hence my confusion. I do not understand the nature of their relationship, but they have the same evil GUI designed by a raving lunatic, so they’re pretty tightly integrated these days. I went with them as one of the very few providers doing paypal registrations of domains.
The email address I registered with them on has now been stolen by someone else - NS uk took the domain, wouldn’t hand it back, and eventually de-registered it and let someone else take it (a startup in Chile, by the looks of things).
Fortunately, I eventually found the original “customer number” (random 10 digit number!) and was able to get control back bit by bit. Although the Chilean company probably has all the account details. Gah.
What a nightmare.