Comment by horsawlarway
Comment by horsawlarway 4 days ago
I'm not entirely clear on what you expect in this case?
You're registering with those 3rd parties using a property (the email address under corpdomain.com) that is now owned by the new party.
This feels a lot like complaining that you hired a lawn service and told them to mow at your address, and then didn't update the address or cancel service after you moved.
You've sold the domain. Assets associated with the domain are under the control of a new party. For all Google knows, you did this entirely above board and in a coordinated fashion.
That new party controls the property. Email resets will also dump right into their hands (They control the MX records for corpdomain.com now...).
Legally speaking, it's not even clear you're right - the new person might well be the person actually entitled and expressly supposed to be accessing that service as that account (if the domain was sold as part of an acquisition or sale).
> Legally speaking, it's not even clear you're right - the new person might well be the person actually entitled and expressly supposed to be accessing that service as that account (if the domain was sold as part of an acquisition or sale).
No, this is absolutely not the case. If you were selling the identity, you would transfer access to the Google Workspace account. There is no reason whatsoever that a new Google Workspace account should have access to the same services as a completely different Google Workspace account just because they happen to use the same DNS domain.