Go back to the page on registrar «Alldomains, LLC», or to the alphabetical list of all accredited registrars, or to the main page of our section about ICANN accredited registrars or to the page on registry operator Afilias .
Data below covers the period:
2002-01 ... 2005-09
Registry operator available data covers the period:
2002-01 .. 2010-04
Contact us if some graphs on this page are missing or odd looking. View our recent updates.
This web page (as well as all included images if present) is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 France License.
Per the previous license, if you use this content please add a clear web link pointing back to this page.
This graph shows the total number of domain names managed by registrar «Alldomains, LLC» in TLD .INFO.
This graph shows the variation of the total number of domain names managed by registrar «Alldomains, LLC» in TLD .INFO, in percentage of the total number of domain names managed by this registrar.
This graph shows the number of domain names managed by registrar «Alldomains, LLC» in TLD .INFO, in percentage of the total number of domain names in registry.
This graph shows the rank of registrar «Alldomains, LLC» in TLD .INFO according to its number of domain names managed among all other live registrars in this TLD during the time in green circles, and in blue squares the rank of a fictional registrar which would handle at least 1% of all domain names at each date.
This graph shows the total number of nameservers managed by registrar «Alldomains, LLC» in TLD .INFO.
This graph shows the percentage of nameservers divided by domain names. If we make the assumption that each client of this registrar is independant, and that each domain name uses 2 nameserves, the theoretical value would be 200%. When the value is closer to zero it means that most domain names are managed by only a few same nameservers, which can reveal services such as «parking» or total DNS control directly by the registrar. Higher values mean that the registrar has very «independant» clients (distinct nameservers, which probably means distinct hosting) and/or more than two nameservers per domain name.
This graph shows the monthly number of domain names deletions by registrar «Alldomains, LLC» in TLD .INFO.
This graph shows, in percentage, the monthly number of domain names deletions by registrar «Alldomains, LLC» in TLD .INFO, in relation with the total number of domain names managed. In a normal sustaining situation, a registrar should only have to delete a small fraction of all domain names because of non renewing clients. High values, especially more than 100%, may be explained by a registrar buying domain names and deleting them before 5 days (during this period it would be at no cost), continuously and for a lot of names : thus its total number of domain names managed will not fluctuate very much even with a lot of deletions.
This graph shows the monthly number of domain names restores by registrar «Alldomains, LLC» in TLD .INFO. With a restore operation, a registrar can get back a domain name deleted by error.
This graphs shows, in percentage, the monthly number of domain names restores by registrar «Alldomains, LLC» in TLD .INFO, in relation with the number of deletions for the same month. The number of restores should be a lot less than the number of deletes, hence this percentage should be near zero.
This graph shows the monthly number of domain names restore violations by registrar «Alldomains, LLC» in TLD .INFO. When a registrar requests a restore, it has to give a certain number of proofs to ensure that the restore is really done in order to get back a domain name deleted by error and against the will of the legitimate registrant. Violations happen if proofs are not given or if they are given but not enough to warrant the restore.
This graph shows, in percentage, the monthly number of domain names restore violations by registrar «Alldomains, LLC» in TLD .INFO, in relation with the number of requested restores. The number of restore violations should be a lot less than the number of restores, hence this percentage should be near zero.
This web page (as well as all included images if present) is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 France License.
Per the previous license, if you use this content please add a clear web link pointing back to this page.