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This is not completely accurate. The whole reason a registrar with domain abc.com can use ns1.abc.com is because glue records are established at the registry, this allows a bootstrap that keeps you in from a circular dependency. All that said it’s usually a bad idea, for someone as large as Facebook they should have nameservers across zones ie a.ns.fb.com b.ns.fb.org c.ns.fb.co Etc…



There is always a step which involve to email the domain when a domain update its information with the registrar. In this case, facebook.com and registrarsafe.com are managed by the same NS. You need these NS to query the MX to send that update approval by email and unblock the registrar update. Glue records are more for performance than to make that loop. I'm maybe missing something but, hopefully they won't need to send an email to fix this issue.


I have literally never once received an email to confirm a domain change. Perhaps the only exception is on a transfer to another registrar (though I can't recall that occurring, either).

To be fair, we did have to get an email from eurid recently for a transfer auth code, but that was only because our registrar was not willing to provide.

In any case, no, they will not need to send an email to fix this issue.


I just changed the email address on all my domains. My inbox got flooded with emails across three different domain vendors. If they didn't do it before, they sure are doing it now.


Yes I meant for transferring to another DNS server. In this case, they can't.


This is not true when your the registrar (as in this case) in fact your entire system could be down and you’d still have access to the registries system to do this update


FB is running their own registrar. Supposedly they can sidestep the email procedure if it's even there to begin with.




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