Microsoft admitted Tuesday it made a technical error after it commandeered part of an Internet service’s network in order to shut down a botnet, but the Nevada-based company says its services are still down.

A federal court in Reno granted Microsoft an ex-parte restraining order that allowed it to take control of 22 domains run by No-IP, a DNS (Domain Name Service) provider owned by Vitalwerks, which was served the order on Monday.

Microsoft alleged the domains were being abused by cybercriminals to manage and distribute malware. It was the tenth time Microsoft has turned to the courts to take sweeping action against botnets, or networks of hacked computers.

Although No-IP was not accused of wrongdoing, Microsoft maintained the company had not done enough to stop abuse on its networks. Microsoft’s intention by seizing the domains was to block only the computers using No-IP’s services that were being used as part of a botnet.

But “due to a technical error, however, some customers whose devices were not infected by the malware experienced a temporary loss of service,” according to an email statement from David Finn, executive director and associate general counsel of Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit.

“We regret any inconvenience these customers experienced,” Finn wrote via email on Tuesday.

He claimed that No-IP’s services were restored at 6 a.m. Pacific Time Tuesday. No-IP spokeswoman Natalie Goguen wrote via email that Microsoft made a technical change on Tuesday to forward legitimate traffic back to No-IP, but “it didn’t do anything.”

“Although they seem to be trying to take corrective measures, DNS is hard, and they don’t seem to be very good at it,” she wrote.

When queried, a Microsoft spokeswoman pointed to a tweet by No-IP that said it was under DDoS (distributed denial-of-service) attack. Goguen responded that No-IP’s website was under attack but it did not affect its DNS infrastructure.

No-IP, yes malware

No-IP provides a free service that allows a customer’s domain name to always point back to their computer even if an ISP assigns a different IP address to a computer when it comes online. It does that by offering subdomains for 22 main domain names it owns.

The IP address of a customer’s subdomain is updated as the computer’s IP address changes. Records in the DNS (Domain Name System) are then updated.

In its civil suit, Microsoft alleged two foreign nationals, Mohamed Benabdellah of Algeria and Naser Al Mutairi of Kuwait, used No-IP’s service to facilitate the management of malware that steals sensitive data from people’s computers.

No-IP’s service “provides computers that move from IP address to IP address a stable domain name for malware-infected computers to contact,” according to the lawsuit.

No-IP maintains that it has worked with companies that reported abuse but “unfortunately, Microsoft never contacted us or asked us to block any subdomains,” according to a blog post on Monday.