The 5 BEST Domain Registrars in 2026: Where to Buy Your Domain Name
Domain name registrars are business who's primary business is helping you get a great domain name at an equally good price point.
I will tell you who the WORST domain company is!
It's DYNADOT
I'd been a customer with them for YEARS
I went to purchase 5 more domains this past weekend
With EVERY purchase I've ever made with them I could IMMEDIATELY change the privacy settings with WHOIS Privacy
Not this time?!?!?!?
It wouldn't let me, so I contacted customer service. They went round-and-round with me saying it wasn't available
Then I turned in a "Service Ticket"
Long story, it appears they changed their Rules and Policies and I couldn't have my information private for any of my domains!?!?!
I HAD 135 domains
I sold them all for $1 each IMMEDIATELY
They just lost a $1,700.11 per year customer
So, I'm rebranding
Why is my privacy SOOOOOO important?
Because my mom's ex, his now wife, his friends and family have been harassing and stalking my mom off-and-on since 2003. It'll be 23 years come April 30, 2026
They've reached out to me more than once trying to befriend me over the years. I CANNOT RISK THEM FINDING ME AND THEN FINDING HER
Mom is a participant of a State run agency that provides her an anonymous address so they can't find her. All her state documents are private as well
I pleaded with Dynadot and all they cared about was THEIR MONEY. I even wrote a letter to Todd Han, Dynadot's CEO. He didn't even have the courtesy to write back
So, now it's Beacons.ai for me!
It's free and I can have privacy and less worry about being found, or my mom being found
Your domain name is more than an address—it’s your brand, identity, and online presence. But before you click “buy,” there’s one critical step many people overlook: researching the domain registrar and it's owners
A domain registrar is a company authorized to register domain names. Popular options include GoDaddy, Namecheap, and Google Domains. While all registrars perform the same basic function, their rules, privacy policies, and customer support can differ drastically
Why Registrar Choice Matters
1. Privacy Protection: Most registrars offer WHOIS privacy, hiding your personal details from the public. But if a registrar changes its policies and revokes privacy, your name, email, and address could become public—sometimes without notification
2. Policy Transparency: Some companies quietly update their rules or terms of service, leaving customers exposed. Understanding their history and reputation is critical
3. Customer Support & Reliability: A registrar with poor support or frequent outages can put your website at risk
What to Do When Policies Change
If your registrar changes rules affecting privacy or domain control:
Read the Updates Carefully: Check WHOIS, renewal fees, and ownership rights
Contact Support: Sometimes you can negotiate or clarify terms
Transfer Your Domain: ICANN allows transfers if you prefer a more trustworthy registrar
Explore WHOIS Privacy Alternatives: Platforms like Beacons.AI or Linktree let you create an online presence without exposing personal domain ownership
Document Everything: Save emails, notices, and agreements in case of disputes
Alternatives to Protect Privacy
Beacons.AI: Centralize your links and social profiles under a secure, branded landing page
Linktree: A simple tool to share multiple links while keeping personal info private
Privacy-Focused Registrars: Services like Njalla focus on protecting domain ownership identity
Tips to Avoid Surprises
1. Read the fine print before buying
2. Choose registrars with strong privacy policies and transparent terms
3. Enable notifications for policy updates
4. Keep payment methods that offer recourse, like credit cards
5. Make sure your domain can be transferred without excessive fees
Bottom Line
A domain name isn’t just a purchase—it’s a long-term investment in your brand. Protecting your privacy, understanding registrar policies, and exploring alternatives can save headaches and safeguard your online identity
Knowledge isn’t just power—it’s protection. Do your homework before buying, and ensure your online presence stays under your control
The Social Security Act, Section 207, protects Social Security benefits from garnishment, with some exceptions. This federal law was enacted on August 10, 1939
The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) is a federal law designed to protect consumers from abusive, deceptive, and unfair debt collection practices. Enacted in 1977, it restricts what third-party debt collectors can do when trying to collect debts from consumers
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We believe every senior community needs an inoperable car with working radio in their parking lot. That way they can sit in it rocking out for the memories. For some that might be the only joy they have in life, especially if their families have taken them to senior communities or nursing homes and rarely, if ever, visit
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This interview took place in 1994. Tiffany Trump was 1 year old at the time. WHO TALKS ABOUT THEIR DAUGHTER LIKE THAT?!? Then again HERE HE TALKS ABOUT WANTING TO DATE HIS OTHER DAUGHTER IVANKA
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This is my mom, now disabled, from 10 years ago talking about some of the abuse she's survived
Robin Leach Defends Trump's Remarks About Daughter's Legs in 1994
An old clip of Donald Trump and Marla Maples appearing on "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous" in 1994 talking about what his one-year-old daughter Tiffany's legs has caused outrage. Robin Leach, who did the interview said it comes down to people "getting their knickers in a knot." "It was just a totally casual remark of one guy telling another guy what he liked about his baby," Leach said. "I defend his remark completely."
Strict Rules U.S. Presidents Must Obey While In Office
The "big lie" is a propaganda technique where a falsehood, so colossal that people struggle to believe anyone would fabricate it, is repeated frequently to gain public acceptance.
Origins of the Term
The concept was coined by Adolf Hitler in his 1925 manifesto, Mein Kampf, to describe a strategy he attributed to Viennese Jews. Ironically, it was Hitler and the Nazis who employed the technique, using the "stab-in-the-back" myth—the false claim that Jews and internal traitors were responsible for Germany's defeat in World War I—as a scapegoat to justify the persecution and eventual genocide of Jews during the Holocaust.
Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi Minister of Propaganda, is often associated with the sentiment "If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it," though evidence suggests he was accusing the English of using this tactic in a 1941 article, rather than openly advocating it himself.
Modern Usage
In contemporary politics, the term is most notably used to refer to President Donald Trump's repeated and unproven claims that the 2020 U.S. presidential election was "stolen" through massive voter fraud.
Key aspects and consequences of this modern application include:
Widespread Dissemination: The claims were spread through numerous channels, including political rallies, lawsuits, and various media outlets and political podcasts.
Incitement of Violence: The rhetoric surrounding the false claims has been linked to the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, where a mob attempted to stop the certification of the election results.
Erosion of Trust: Despite multiple state and federal court rulings, audits, and investigations confirming the election's integrity, a significant portion of the American public continues to believe the claims, contributing to low trust in electoral institutions.
Legislative Impact: The claims have been cited as justification for new, more restrictive voting laws in various states.
Other modern examples of the term's use in political discourse include Russian President Vladimir
Putin's claims of Western aggression to justify the invasion of Ukraine, and the Chinese government's denial of human rights abuses against Uyghurs.
True and False Prophets
“Watch out for false prophets. They come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ferocious wolves."
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