Many individuals and
businesses have a web site but few understand their
rights to the ownership
of that site, or their responsibility to maintain that
ownership. I bring this up because of a call
I received last week from an individual whose website
was “stolen”. They went on the Internet
the
other day to look at their website and something completely
different appeared. Someone else
was using their name and promoting a completely different
product than the original owners had.
In this example, no crime was committed. I will explain.
When you create a website,
there are three costs involved. The first is the purchase
of your domain
name or URL as it is sometimes referred. This is the
unique address you type into the browser to
find your site such as www.yourname.com or www.buymystuff.net.
These can be purchased from
hundreds of sites on the Internet and are not that expensive.
You can purchase these for a minimum
of one year and for multiple years if desired. Once
purchased, your domain need to be “pointed to”
the physical computer that your website will reside
on.
The second cost involved
is the purchase of the hosting package. This is the
money you pay to rent
a space on one of the thousands of web servers located
all over the world. There are free hosting
packages available but they have their disadvantages
and I won’t go into that here. Most people host
their site on an ISP (Internet Service Provider) that
is in their geographical area although there is no
reason not to host on a server half way around the world,
if it is a good, inexpensive, and reliable
hosting server.
The third cost is to
have your website created and maintained by a website
designer of your
choosing. Many people like to do this part themselves
and there are many programs and books
out there to help you create your own website. Many
times the customer will have a website
designer take care of all three steps for them and just
pay one fee. The web designer sends your
website from his computer where he/she created it up
to the server and can take care of all the
details regarding #1 and #2 above.
Here is where you need
to be a good consumer and know a little more about the
process.
You are the owner of
your domain name and the owner of your website. Although
most people
grant their website designer or website administrator
the power to control all of this, and although
most people do not understand the technicalities of
domains and hosting packages, you should still
have all the details readily available.
If you have a business
website and delegated any of the work involved in setting
it up to another
person, you should still maintain complete control over
its future.
Whether you or someone
else purchases the domain name for your website
(the www.yourname.com), make certain that you have the
contact details from the company it was
purchased from, and the corresponding username and password
to access control over the domain's
use. Most importantly, make sure you are listed as the
registered owner of the website, not the
person or company that is creating your website for
you. All registered domains have four contact
individuals listed on the Internet. Your web administrator
can be listed as the technical contact or the
administrative contact but you need to be listed as
the registered owner. This way, if any changes
are made to the status of the domain, you are informed
as well, and you should be notified when
the domain name is about to expire.
This is how my friends’
website was “stolen”. He was not listed
as the owner, and the design
company that was listed as the owner went out of business.
When the domain name expired
(remember, you purchase these for a limited time and
then have to renew), the owner did
not know it and that particular domain name became available
for anyone else to purchase
– legally. Thus, my friends website was not really
stolen. He was the victim of ignorance.