Forum Discussion
Domain Ownership
- Apr 30, 2019
Thanks for your suggestion. The issue here is I do not have access to the tenant that already has my domain registered. Hence there is no way I can log in to that tenant and remove the domain from that tenant, no matter of I try internal or external takeover.
that's why I said seems quite strange that MS is recommending to log in to someone else's tenant and remove the domain from there.... MS has already verified that I own the domain...
This is simply the case of Domain Dispute.....I am in touch with MS support so that they can contact the owner of the tenant mehtatech.onmicrosoft.com and get (o365.co.in) removed from there....
My tenant is offclab.onmicrosoft.com.
Thanks
Thanks for your suggestion. The issue here is I do not have access to the tenant that already has my domain registered. Hence there is no way I can log in to that tenant and remove the domain from that tenant, no matter of I try internal or external takeover.
that's why I said seems quite strange that MS is recommending to log in to someone else's tenant and remove the domain from there.... MS has already verified that I own the domain...
This is simply the case of Domain Dispute.....I am in touch with MS support so that they can contact the owner of the tenant mehtatech.onmicrosoft.com and get (o365.co.in) removed from there....
My tenant is offclab.onmicrosoft.com.
Thanks
The whole idea behind the takeover process is that you don't (need to) have access to the tenant currently using the domain. Just follow the procedure and you can "free" the domain. That's of course assuming the domain was provisioned in a "viral" type of subscription. If it's a "regular" tenant, then work with support.