I'm in a tricky situation after a falling out with a co-founder. A few months back, I assisted her in setting up her first AWS account while we were collaborating on a project. I did all the technical work, including code and infrastructure setup. During this time, I registered a domain, dfuseapp.com, in my name and received all the registration notices and confirmations to my email. However, the payments were made through her AWS account since that was the setup we had.
After our partnership ended, the domain was inexplicably restored to her AWS account without my consent. I contacted AWS support, providing them with all relevant evidence of my ownership, including emails and registration notices. Unfortunately, their response was that they can't intervene since the domain points to her account's registrant of record, and the only way to reclaim the domain is through a court order.
I'm already starting afresh with a new domain, but I'm seeking insights on whether there's any non-legal avenue for regaining access to the domain when the registrant of record is linked to an account created by a person I no longer work with. Has anyone faced a similar issue?
5 Answers
Unfortunately, there might not be any non-legal options available to you in this case. Your best bet is to consult a lawyer to explore your rights and any potential legal actions you could take.
Honestly, you have two paths: either take this as a lesson learned and move on or consider seeking legal help. That's where you're likely to find more effective solutions.
I get where you're coming from, but just putting your name as the registrant doesn't mean you actually registered the domain. It seems like it’s effectively registered under her account, which complicates things.
What really counts is who paid for the domain and whether you have a strong claim like a trademark. Have you looked into the Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy (UDRP)? That could be a route worth considering.
Getting a court order would really be your best chance here. You could also file a UDRP complaint. If you can prove you're the registrant, AWS may help you retrieve the domain if the other party doesn't dispute it. They might claim it's already been changed though, which could complicate things.

Related Questions
How to Build a Custom GPT Journalist That Posts Directly to WordPress
Cloudflare Origin SSL Certificate Setup Guide
How To Effectively Monetize A Site With Ads