Who owns your domain?
14 December 2007

A domain name and website are now recognised legally as important assets of a company, but businesses which think they own both, often don’t…
A few years ago I was the chairman of the short-lived website developers organization “Web Pro Wales”. The lofty aim of WPW was to encourage and develop best practice in both the way we deal with our clients and the websites and software we sell them. I spent many hours in discussion with a small group of founder businesses trying to decide on the list of standards our members should either have already achieved, or should be working towards. Many of the proposed standards were contentious resulting in extended debate, but one was not. In essence it was that:
Unless specifically requested otherwise, domain names purchased on behalf of a client by the developer should always be registered using the name, address and contact details of the client.
In other words, never, ever, register clients’ domains in your own or your business’ name, because if you do, you will own the domain that they have paid for.
Domain ownership is not a trivial or merely technical matter. Ownership confers almost total control over the usage of that domain, including the right to sell it to anyone for any price, rent it, or simply “cyber-sit”, doing nothing at all with it.
I was reminded of this principle last week when I received a request to re-develop a website for a holiday cottage business on the West Wales coast. I thought I had better check when their domain needed renewing and so did a “WHOIS” database lookup using www.scl.co.uk/domains
I was surprised to find that the domain was registered as owned by their former website development company Wales Tourists Online, based in Bangor, North Wales. I emailed the company and explained that I was putting together a proposal for a new site and asked how much they would sell the domain for.
Bearing in mind that a .co.uk domain costs only £5 a year to keep renewed, and Wales Tourists Online had had a 6 year, and presumably good, relationship with my client, I expected a reply saying a tenner or some nominal amount for a domain which is of no use to them, as it refers to someone else’s business. The reply I got from Wales Tourists Online was a shock. It stated simply:
“The domain name is for sale @ £500.00″.
I replied, offering £75 for the domain and received this response from a Tony Thomas of Wales Tourists Online:
“We are no longer willing to sell the name. Should they choose us to host it we would be willing to let them use the domain free of charge”
Hosting with them he said would cost £120 a year.
I then did a Google Search for Wales Tourists Online and looked at the domain name registrations of some of their customers. Below is a sample of what I found. The domain names of a significant number of sites hosted by Wales Tourists Online are not owned by the business owner, but by Wales Tourists Online, just as my new client’s had been.
Any business which finds its domain name registered in the name of their hosting or website design company please be warned. Everything may be fine now, but if you decide to move, you might find it difficult, or expensive to do so with your current domain name.
The UK Domain Name registration body - Nominet - does have a dispute resolution service however there are hefty fees involved and it can take months. Certain specialist lawyers will also take up your case, but at £350+ per letter, that’s not cheap either. For my client, the simplest and least expensive solution was to buy a new domain (£30 for a .com and £10 for a .co.uk) and develop a new site at this location. Should they wish to move hosting company or change their website designer in the future, they have the power to do so, completely free of charge.
The Domain Name Lookups below were made on 13th December 2007. Current registration details can be checked at www.scl.co.uk/domains.
Llys Olwen
Morfa Nefyn,
Gwynedd.
LL53 6BT
Domain name:
llysolwen.co.uk
Registrant:
Wales Tourists Online.
Registrant’s address:
Unit 8
BridgeGate Trading Mews
Bridgegate
Retford
Notts
DN22 7XB
Nant Newydd Caravan Park
Brynteg,
Benllech,
Isle of Anglesey
LL78 7JJ.
Domain name:
nantnewydd.co.uk
Registrant:
Wales Tourists Online.
Registrant’s address:
Unit 8
BridgeGate Trading Mews
Bridgegate
Retford
Notts
DN22 7XB
Celyn Brithion
Dinas Mawddwy,
Nr. Machynlleth,
Powys,
SY20 9LP
Domain name:
celynbrithion.co.uk
Registrant:
Wales Tourists Online.
Registrant’s address:
9 Swn Yr Engan
Gaerwen
Anglesey
LL60 6LS
GB
Glyn y Coed Hotel
Portmadog Rd,
Criccieth,
Gwynedd,
North Wales
LL52 OHL
Domain name:
glynycoedhotel.co.uk
Registrant:
Tony Thomas
Registrant’s address:
9 Swn Yr Engan
Gaerwen
Anglesey
LL60 6LS
Cwmanog Isaf Farm B&B
www.cwmanogisaffarmholidays.co.uk
Betws-y-Coed,
Gwynedd,
LL24 0SL
Domain name:
cwmanogisaffarmholidays.co.uk
Registrant:
Wales Tourists Online.
Registrant’s address:
Unit 8
BridgeGate Trading Mews
Bridgegate
Retford
Notts
DN22 7XB
The Oasis Hotel
Nevill Crescent,
Central Promenade,
Llandudno,
North Wales
Domain name:
oasis-hotel.co.uk
Registrant:
Wales Tourists Online.
Registrant’s address:
9 Swn Yr Engan
Gaerwen
Anglesey
LL60 6LS
Dwy Olwyn Guest House
Coed-y-Fronallt,
Dolgellau,
Gwynedd,
LL40 2YG
Domain name:
dwyolwyn.co.uk
Registrant:
Tony Thomas T/A Wales Tourists Online.
Registrant’s address:
9 Swn y egan
Gaerwen
Anglesey
LL60 6LS
Henllan Mill
Llangynyw,
Welshpool,
Powys,
SY21 9EN
Domain name:
henllanmill.co.uk
Registrant:
Wales Tourists Online.
Registrant’s address:
9 Swn Yr Engan
Gaerwen
Anglesey
LL60 6LS
Garnedd Holiday Cottages
www.garneddholidaycottages.co.uk
Garnedd Ddu Holiday Cottages
Star,
Gaerwen,
Isle of Anglesey
Sir Fôn,
LL60 6AN
Domain name:
garneddholidaycottages.co.uk
Registrant:
Wales Tourists Online.
Registrant’s address:
9 Swn Yr Engan
Gaerwen
Anglesey
LL60 6LS
Pandy Cottage B&B
Llanfechell
Nr Cemaes Bay
Anglesey North Wales
LL68 0SW
Domain name:
pandybar.co.uk
Registrant:
Tony Thomas
Registrant’s address:
9 Swn Yr Engan
Gaerwen, Anglesey
Gaerwen
Anglesey
LL60 6LS
Dolgelynen Farmhouse B&B
Dolgelynen Farmhouse
Machynlleth,
Powys,
SY20 9JR
Domain name:
dolgelynenfarmhouse.co.uk
Registrant:
Wales Tourists Online.
Registrant’s address:
9 Swn Yr Engan
Gaerwen
Anglesey
LL60 6LS
Bryn Glo Guest House and Tea Room
Capel Curig
Snowdonia
Conwy
LL24 0DT
Domain name:
bryn-glow.com
Registrant:
Thomas, Tony
Registrant’s address:
9 Swn Yr Engan
Gaerwen
Anglesey
LL60 6LS
Seaspray Guest House
4 Marine Terrace
Criccieth
Gwynedd
North Wales
LL52 OEF
Domain name:
seasprayguesthouse.co.uk
Registrant:
Wales Tourists Online
9 Swn Yr Engan
Gaerwen
Anglesey
LL60 6LS
↑ Back to top ↑
I went to Cardiff Bay on Friday to take some pictures of The National Assembly for Wales “Senedd” Building for a website I’m currently working on. I was lucky with the weather - I hadn’t checked before I went.
The Senedd doesn’t sit on Fridays - the Assembly Members (AM’s) hold their constituency surgeries that day. Maybe that was why the docks area was so eerily quiet. I’m not complaining, the lack of people made it possible to take some good panoramic photos. People moving across the scene often appear as ghosts, or in more than one place at once!
The photos which went to make up the shots below were taken with my Lumix DMC FZ10 on a tripod and combined into a montage. The first photo is taken from the centre of the Oval Basin. It is a 360º panorama starting and ending at the former dock entrance with the Millenium Centre towards the middle and the red brick Bute Dock Building to the right. The finished photo is 1,600 pixels high by 15,000 wide, the one below being a fraction of that. Just scroll sideways to see the full Panorama.
In certain browsers the picture will appear very wide and narrow. Simply click on the image to make it expand.
Please Note: These photos are copyright ©Webs Wonder Design. High resolution versions are available for use under a Rights Managed / Rights Reserved license (ie for specific named projects). Please contact me with usage requests.
Here is one just of the Millenium Centre. The slate-faced part of the building to the right is not curve-fronted like the main facade, it’s just the result of the panoramic shot. Also that the silver tower on the left did not have water cascading down it when I took the shot, which means that the reflection of the surrounding buildings is better and the sun is mirrored, refecting lines across the concourse.
Below is the Welsh Assembly Senedd Building with the Pierhead Building to the left.
Below is the entrance hall/concourse of the Senedd Building. At this level is the Public Gallery. On the level below is the Senedd debating chamber and on the level above is situated seating and a refreshments area.

From the floor of the top level - above the Senedd Chamber - the roof springs organically.

Below is the Senedd Chamber - viewed from the Public Gallery.

Below that is the debating chamber.

↑ Back to top ↑
Best MP’s Website Award
9 November 2007
The website I designed for Adam Price MP has won the British Computer Society’s “Best MP’s Website Award“.
The BCS president and head of the judging panel Nigel Shadbolt described the site as “an outstanding example” of design, engagement and accessibility.
You can browse every UK MP’s website to compare and contrast. If that’s not enough excitement for you, how about the website of every Member of the European Parliament.
Many members of the Welsh Assembly Government have websites but I can’t find a simple list of them. There is however a novel sales pitch which many have taken part in, otherwise known as a video biography. I think they need to be as innovative as Plaid election broadcasts before they’ll make it on to YouTube.
↑ Back to top ↑
Wow! St Davids Cathedral Pembrokeshire
24 October 2007
I took a friend to St Davids in Pembrokeshire yesterday. Britain’s smallest city, but with a wow! cathedral set with a backdrop of farms and fields and only a stone’s throw from the craggy Pembrokeshire coastline. A couple of miles beyond the hill in the distance is the sea. Click on the images for larger ones. If you would like to use any of the photos (also available high resolution for printing), please contact me for terms and conditions.
Update 27th February 2008
Took another trip to St Davids today on a blissfully clear and warm day to update my photo collection. The cathedral looked spectacular. They must mow the grass at least weekly as every time I’m here it looks beautifully manicured. With only 3 days to go to St David’s Day on March 1st (The Patron Saint of Wales), there is an extra splash of colour with house windows being decorated with flags and daffodils and leeks.
Continue reading Wow! St Davids Cathedral Pembrokeshire
↑ Back to top ↑
At last, The Misrepresentation of the People Act
22 October 2007

Politicians never lie. They use “terminological inexactitudes” or are “economical with the truth” and might even “seek to to mislead”, but lying they don’t, because it is not allowed in Parliament for one politician to call another a liar . The public, however are not constrained by such conventions. They soon become aware that they have been grossly misled or told deliberate half truths (or double-truths if you are an accountant like PM Gordon Brown) and they then brand all Politicians as “liars” - which they are not. The small number of lying politicians bring the whole profession into disrepute. Most Cabinet Ministers it seems have trained as lawyers, so their command of language seems to equip them perfectly for the techniques of putting an unhealthy gloss on the the actuality.
Continue reading At last, The Misrepresentation of the People Act
↑ Back to top ↑
The persistence of Japanese Knotweed
6 October 2007
When I moved to Cwm Morgan 12 years ago I was ignorant in the ways of Japanese Knotweed. Once I found out more about the luxuriant growth sprouting tall from 3 metres of our earth and stone boundary I realized that it was something I wanted to remove. I tried “Roundup” weed killer and come November the green went brown and died back. Result! I thought - wrongly. The following summer it was back again with avengeance. Well not so much back, as never having gone - I didn’t realize that the dying back was what all healthy Knotweed does over the winter.
Continue reading The persistence of Japanese Knotweed
↑ Back to top ↑
Newcastle-Emlyn.com
23 September 2007
At the very end of the 20th century I wrote to the Newcastle Emlyn Town Council and offered them a website for the town. The town didn’t have one and I said that I was prepared to pay for the cost of hosting and of development, if they would provide some copy, and allow me to put some advertising for Webs Wonder on it.
I heard nothing back from them for months, until early one Thursday evening, I got a call from the Town Clerk. He was just about to leave for the monthly Town Council meeting and sheepishly asked me, with reference to my letter to the Town Council, did my offer to create the website free of charge mean they wouldn’t have to pay anything? “Yes!” I said. “Totally free”. At last! I thought, the wheels of local government turn slowly, but they get there eventually. So I waited for a reply to my letter, and waited and waited, But none came. In fact, I’m still waiting to this day….
Continue reading Newcastle-Emlyn.com
↑ Back to top ↑
The BBC iPlayer - a step backwards
11 September 2007
Please Note: This article won’t tell you how to crack The BBC iPlayer DRM or tell you how to uninstall the iPlayer. It contains my and other peoples opinions on DRM and the iPlayer and some useful links at the foot of the page, but that’s all.
I’ve heard a bit about the new BBC iPlayer, so I thought I’d sign up for the Beta service. It was a short and disappointing experience, but then getting into bed with Microsoft, as the BBC has done, you’d expect that to be the case. Initially, in my ignorance, I tried to access the player with the Firefox browser and I got this message:
Sorry, but to use the BBC iPlayer you need the following
- Windows XP
- Internet Explorer
- Windows Media Player
Continue reading The BBC iPlayer - a step backwards
↑ Back to top ↑
Mazwi.net
7 September 2007
This week I’ve launched a site for Tinashe Mushakavanhu, a talented young writer from Zimbabwe. Tinashe is the first African writer to do the MA in Creative Writing at Trinity College, Carmarthen in Wales, having graduated with a first class honours degree in English Literature from the Midlands State University.
Tinashe is a fellow of the Crossing Borders Creative Writing Project and was invited to help organize the Africa section of the Hay Festival and his festival blog can still be read. Tinashe is already published in several countries as a Google search reveals.
↑ Back to top ↑
And when the wind doesn’t blow?
3 September 2007

Electricity prices may rise by 50% because the UK isn’t as windy as the developers claimed when getting their large government subsidies.
Investors are flocking to wind power, not because it is an effective way of cutting greenhouse emissions, but because it is a good financial bet, due to big handouts from a government desperate to meet it’s renewable obligations .
As with most government green policies, it is only short term. The long term will see an increase in greenhouse gas output. The measures which would really make a difference, like seriously improving insulation and reducing other energy waste are underfunded because they are not “sexy” enough to get votes.
Wind power is just like the New Labour Government. Loads of spin, but ultimately ineffective.
Listen to BBC environment programme “Costing the Earth” Click here .
Download and read a presentation by Professor Peter Cobbold (PDF format 6Mb)
↑ Back to top ↑