Hosting Advice for Consumer Advocacy Websites?
rcthompson asks: "I host a web site with information about fraudulent career marketing companies, but over the past year it has been repeatedly deleted by a series of hosting companies after they received a threatening letter from the lawyer for one of the companies listed on the web site. Are there any hosting companies out there who are involved or interested in consumer advocacy and will not delete a web site just because they receive a threatening letter? Is it better to use overseas hosting companies? Is there any way to completely hide who your hosting company is so that the bad guys cannot figure out who to send the threatening letter to? One could host the web site on one's own server and use one's own nameservers, but the IP address will reveal your ISP who could possibly shut down your site. Any advice is appreciated. Thanks."
Media Temple.
SPAM Violation!
This site has been banned for SPAM violations. We apologize for the idiot webmaster who could not control him/her self.
Perhaps there are other reasons your site keeps getting taken down?
On the chance that you're not a spammer and that's just their standard removal notice, I'd recommend contacting your potential hosters before signing up and inform them of the situation. They'll be much more willing to stand by you if they know what's going on in advance.
Sorry to reply to my own comment, but I forgot to say something.
:-)
Find some other sites that have similar content (and appear to be surviving legal threats) and ask/find out their ISP. Easy, eh?
p.s. popup warning for IE users on the link in the article...
http://www.havenco.com
http://www.sealandgov.com
Assuming you are non-profit, you might try:
/. story about them in the past.
Community Colo in the bay area. They host non-profit servers for free, or by reasonable donation. I think there was a
-Sean
I have a consumer advocacy website, dontbuycds.org on Fidelity Hosting. They have never given me any grief about the content of that site. They also have left alone my online tabloid, The Uncoveror. I can't complain about them.
The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
No, not it's not. As posted in many businesses, "we reserve the right to refuse to serve any customer". A company cannot violate your free speech rights. Your free speech rights can only be violated by the government, if they choose to use a law that abridges such rights. A company deciding they don't want you as a customer is not a violation of rights.
It's stupid arguments like this that water down legitimate first-ammendment violations...