Transfer domain names away from the embattled domain registrar, and you just might get a call from GoDaddy itself.

After taking an Internet firestorm on the chin, domain name registrar GoDaddy has officially withdrawn its opinion on the controversial Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA)statements by GoDaddy CEO Warren Adelman indicate that the company , instead choosing to duck out of the chit-chat entirely.

The move should ideally prevent those threatening to leave GoDaddy from pulling the plugincluding, for example, , who threatened to pull more than 1,000 domains from the registrar if it continued to support the legislation.

However, GoDaddy's "stance reversal" hasn't stopped a number of the service's customers from dropping their accounts and transferring their domains to other providers anyway. In response to that, GoDaddy's now allegedly caught up in a sea of damage control. According to some (former) GoDaddy users, representatives from the company are calling up those who have elected to transfer their domain names in an attempt to convince them to stick around.

Mashable chief architect Chris Heald is one such user, and relayed his experience with GoDaddy's retention representatives as part of a Google+ post.

"I just got a call from #GoDaddy. The rep said he noticed that I'd transferred my 60+ domains away [ ] and wanted to know if I'd tell them why. I got to tell them that it was because of their #SOPA support, and that I couldn't in good conscience give my money to a tech company that would support legislation like that," Heald wrote.

"I told him I was aware that they had reversed their position, but that their explicit support of it in the first place had cost them my confidence in them, as it is at the best viciously ignorant, and at worst, malicious," he continued.

According to Heald, the GoDaddy representative briefly explained GoDaddy's latest stance regarding SOPA and asked him whether there was anything the company could do to bring him back as a customer. Heald told the representative no, and that ended the conversation.

So will you get a chit-chat with GoDaddy if you transfer away a single domain name? It's unclear. But it doesn't appear as if GoDaddy is targeting high-profile users, or even users with a significant number of domain names, for phone calls.

"Godaddy called today after I transferred my 26 domain names," tweeted self-professed "sub par comedian" Richard Ryan. "'We changed our SOPA stance' Your past action speaks louder than recent words!"

For more from David, subscribe to him on Facebook: David Murphy.