Frequently Asked Questions

The NearlyFreeSpeech.NET FAQ (*)

Non-Member (*)

One of your customers' sites offends me. Who do I email to have it taken down?

How do I report a violation of your Terms and Conditions of Service or illegal activity?

How do I report that my copyrighted content is being distributed by a site you host?

What happens when I report a technical problem with someone else's services?

How do I report a technical problem with a NearlyFreeSpeech.NET site?

How do I contact the operator of services you host?

I am a journalist doing a story on a site you host. May I interview you?

One of your members hosts something for me (or my/our organization). Will you give me access to it?

Why do you host really, really offensive content?

How do I take over responsibility for something hosted by one of your members?

We support four types of transfers:

The current member can set up any of those for you with minimal effort. It takes less than five minutes. For all of the options except transferring everything, you'll need to have a membership of your own first.

The only thing we don't allow is for them to just hand over their username and password and book it. If they try that, they may or may not realize that they are setting you up for serious problems (and potentially a $50 fee) down the road. Don't let them!

That's pretty much it. If you need it, here's more background about how our system works.

At NearlyFreeSpeech.NET, responsibility is divided into two distinct pieces: a membership and an account. A membership represents an individual person. A person can only have one membership, which has their real/legal name on it. Memberships cannot be shared or transferred.

An account is a separate piece under the membership that contains money, sites, domains, everything related to hosting for a specific entity (which might be the same person, or it might be a company, club, or organization.).

Usually, one membership has one account. But a web developer may have a bunch of accounts on their membership, one for each customer. And big projects may have a bunch of memberships sharing access to one account. We support all of those things.

Here are some takeover tips:

If I think services you host are currently unavailable due to lack of funds; is there anything I can do?