DreamHost Affiliate Program Review. DreamHost is a Los Angeles-based web hosting provider and domain name registrar. It is owned by New Dream Network, LLC, founded in 1996 by Dallas Bethune, Josh Jones, Michael Rodriguez and Sage Weil, undergraduate students at Harvey Mudd College in Claremont, California, and registered in 1997 by Michael Rodriguez. DreamHost began hosting customers’ sites in 1997. In May 2012, DreamHost spun off Inktank. Inktank is a professional services and support company for the open source Ceph file system. In November 2014, DreamHost spun off Akanda, an open source network virtualization project. As of February 2016, Dreamhost employs about 200 people and has close to 400,000 customers.
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About This Company:
DreamHost is a Los Angeles-based web hosting provider and domain name registrar. DreamHost began hosting customers’ sites in 1997.
It is owned by New Dream Network, LLC, founded in 1996 by Dallas Bethune, Josh Jones, Michael Rodriguez and Sage Weil, undergraduate students at Harvey Mudd College in Claremont, California, and registered in 1997 by Michael Rodriguez.
About The Affiliate Program:
Join the DreamHost Affiliate Program to get cash quickly. Earn up to $200 per referral!
Monthly Plan Payout Starting at $15/referral
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Yearly Plan Payout Starting at $50/referral
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Shared Starter
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$15 | $50 |
Shared Unlimited
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$30 | $100 |
VPS (Virtual Private Server)
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$30 | $100 |
Dedicated Server
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$200 | $200 |
DreamPress (WordPress Hosting)
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$150 | $150 |
https://www.dreamhost.com/affiliates/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DreamHost
https://www.trustpilot.com/review/www.dreamhost.com
Anti-Trump site warrant
On July 12, 2017, the U.S. Department of Justice was granted a federal search warrant ordering DreamHost to hand over IP addresses and other personally identifiable data from visitors to disruptj20.org, a website that helped organize anti-Trump protests on and around Inauguration Day 2017. The Electronic Frontier Foundation said in a blog entry there was “no plausible explanation” for such a warrant and asserted it violates the Fourth Amendment. DreamHost went to court, seeking to narrow the scope of the warrant, and in October 2017, Chief Judge Robert E. Morin, of the District of Columbia Superior Court, did just that, ordering that the DOJ could execute its warrant, but that “it does not have the right to rummage through the information contained on DreamHost’s website and discover the identity of, or access communications by, individuals not participating in alleged criminal activity, particularly those who were engaging in protected First Amendment activities.”