1 | initial version |
Actually you are blocking IP-ranges, not counties.
With the current shortage of IPv4 addresses, IP-ranges are traded more frequently and the buyer may be in a different country. The Geo location service you are using must then notified of the change and update their database manually. (Assuming the buyer only uses it in a specific location or country...)
Regarding DNS naming: the (sub-)domain is just a name. It can be freely chosen (within the naming format).
2 | No.2 Revision |
Actually you are blocking IP-ranges, not counties.
With the current shortage of IPv4 addresses, IP-ranges are traded more frequently and the buyer may be in a different country. The Geo location service you are using must then be notified of the change and update their database manually. (Assuming the buyer only uses it in a specific location or country...)
Regarding DNS naming: the (sub-)domain is just a name. It can be freely chosen (within the naming format).