INTERNET BASED SERVICE WHICH ALLOWS CUSTOMERS

Brand Owner (click to sort) Address Description
CREDITSCREENER.COM TELEDATA COMMUNICATIONS, INC. 1636 Fifth Avenue Bay Shore NY 11706 Internet-based service which allows customers to access various third-party data repositories, through a web site owned by the applicant, in order to obtain information from such repositories for use by credit grantors;CREDIT SCREENER DOT COM;
DECISIONLENDER.COM TELEDATA COMMUNICATIONS, INC. 1636 Fifth Avenue Bay Shore NY 11706 Internet-based service which allows customers to access various third-party data repositories, through a web site owned by the applicant, in order to obtain information from such repositories for use by credit grantors;DECISION LENDER DOT COM;
TENANTSCREENER.COM TELEDATA COMMUNICATIONS, INC. 1636 Fifth Avenue Bay Shore NY 11706 internet-based service which allows customers to access various third-party data repositories, through a web site owned by the Applicant, in order to obtain information from such repositories for use by landlords and their agents;TENANT SCREENER DOT COM;
 

Where the owner name is not linked, that owner no longer owns the brand

   
Technical Examples
  1. A method and apparatus for resolving where to forward DNS (domain name service) requests for a user simultaneously logged into more than one service existing on a data communications network utilizes an active service list (ASL) to keep track of the services that the user is currently logged into. The active service list includes a list of services sorted in a particular order based on information about the service and sometimes the order in which the user logged into the services. Each service has a profile that defines, among other things, the IP Address space for the service and a Domain attribute. To determine the appropriate service and, therefore, the appropriate DNS server for a DNS request, the QName from the DNS request is compared to the configured Domain attribute(s) for each service in the order of the ASL. If a match is found, then the DNS request packet is modified to re-direct the DNS request to the DNS server configured for the matched service. If no domain match is found and the user is logged into an Internet Service, then the DNS request packet is modified to re-direct the DNS request to the DNS server configured for the first Internet Service found in the user's ASL. If no domain match is found and the user is not logged into an active Internet Service, then the DNS request is not re-directed, but rather forwarded unmodified.