Not sure who changed the HN headline, but I appreciate the change. Especially since the concept in the headline is buried at the bottom of the post.
Post author is throwing a lot of sand at Google for a process that has (a) been around for, what, over a decade now and (b) works. The fact of the matter is this hosting provider was too open, several users of the provider used it to put up content intended to attack users, and as far as Google (or anyone else on the web is concerned) the TLD is where the buck stops for that kind of behavior. This is one of the reasons why you host user-generated content off your TLD, and several providers have gotten the memo; it is unfortunate statichost.eu had not yet.
I'm sorry this domain admin had to learn an industry lesson the hard way, but at least they won't forget it.
Author here. I understand that my post and what I'm trying to say is unclear. And that there are too many different aspects to all this.
What I'm trying to say in the post specifically about Google is that I personally think that they have too much power. They can and will shut down a whole domain for four billion users. That is too much power no matter the intentions, in my opinion. I can agree that the intentions are good and that the net effect is positive on the whole, though.
On the "different aspects" side of things, I'm not sure I agree with the _works_ claim you make. I guess it depends on what your definition of works is, but having a blacklist as you tool to fight bad guys is not something that works very well in my opinion. Yes, specifically my own assets would not have been impacted, had I used a separate domain earlier. But the point still stands.
The fact that it took so long to move user content off the main domain is of course on me. I'm taking some heat here for saying this is more important than one (including me) might think. But nonetheless, let it be a lesson for those of you out there who think that moving that forum / upload functionality / wiki / CMS to its own domain (not subdomain) can be done tomorrow instead of today.