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| Dances With Dogs Name: info [@] gerry.mobi Last Online: Today 10:51 PM iTrader: (73) Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 10,293
DNF$: 25,477
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It will be yours. Expense? A program. Impossible to do? I have already outlined how it is done. You know this can be done and you know it can be done at a reasonable cost . You act like you have to hire an entire staff to do it. This is not the case and you know it. A name gets red flagged and it is checked. How difficult can that be. Some companies do that and charge a fee. Like Pool catching domains and charging a fee to the buyer and winners? Great concept of doing business. Playing dumb is not going to make this issue go away. It is not just Pool and it is not going to go away. Seriously, time to implement some measures to protect the consumer and protect these brands before it is written into law and ICANN is replaced by another body. As for a TM holder just paying 60 bucks (if that ever happens) vs UDRP/WIPO, how about the TM holder just filing suit in district and federal court. What, costly you say? What kind of mileage and traffic and notice such a filing would bring to the general public? Seems to me Microsoft could easily seized the 44 names from the three individuals typosquatting in the state of Indiana. Why do that when every newspaper and internet media outlet picked up the story and ran with it. Cost to microsoft? Court filing fees. Free publicity? Priceless. Even microsoft would have to had shelled out millions to sway every print and internet media outlet to make this story a feature. Last edited by biggedon; 03-09-2009 at 07:44 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost | ||
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| | #22 (permalink) | |
| Missing in action Name: Kate Last Online: Today 06:44 PM iTrader: (41) Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 4,668
DNF$: 28,093 Location: .cz
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Nobody is saying you must monitor all names for possible TM violations, but when you dispatch a daily 'selection' of drops to your customers, it is your editorial responsibility not to appear to be endorsing the registration of blatant TM domains. It's no wonder domains have such a bad rep when the industry leaders set the standards. Seriously, it's an invitation to another Snowe Bill. Maybe one day Verizon et al will have had enough and they will sue you like they did to onlinenic. When they drive you out of business I will place a backorder on the pool.com domain ![]()
__________________ VeryOldNames.com | |
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| | #23 (permalink) |
| iSpoof.com Last Online: Today 04:48 PM iTrader: (112) Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 11,000
DNF$: 51,477 Location: 96.net | if i were on a fence, i'd have to fall on the side of pool in this argument why, because the issue of screening a list, means that those customerrs who bidded on any domain, that you feel is Blatant TM, then that customer is deprived of seeing the name on the list to possibly confirm his order. in other words by screening a list, you would be censoring it. you are attempting to deprive other entrepreneurs from engaging in the nature of their business, because you want to dictate what a domainer is and or should be about. emotions aside, and speaking only from an "if, then" philosophy. not trying to judge what is right or wrong, because only a judge/panel can deem a domain to be "infringed" upon and not any of us....unless we sit in those chairs. now if i were to get back on that fence and fall on the other side, i could argue that if pool has any of these domains parked and receive any revenue from traffic, then after the name is won, the buyer gets a C&D, but pool does not. now that would be something to argue about...imo ![]() but i think it's good to have the list as is, so that if any tm holders see their names, then they can bid on them like we do. then they will learn the value of domains and start regging the typos too the real fight is at the registrar and ppc as long as you can register one (TM) and as long as the registry continues to let the exisiting one's drop, then the cycle will continue. as long as ppc's pay for parking them, then the cycle will continue it's hard to blame the middleman, when it's so many middlemen ![]()
__________________ worldiptv.com * svc.net * belisted.com * mobi.us.com * sop.net * qfm.net * upyo.com * vioz.com * Need A SedoPro Account PM Me |
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| | #24 (permalink) |
| Dances With Dogs Name: info [@] gerry.mobi Last Online: Today 10:51 PM iTrader: (73) Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 10,293
DNF$: 25,477
Country: | If I thought for one minute that the list compiled and sent out to each subscriber was randomly selected by a computer then there would be no issue. Those names appearing on the list are hand selected and that listing is compiled by a human and send to subscribers. The argument of no resources is shallow and full of holes as that resource you just assigned to that task could have easily selected a non-tm. Lets face it. 820996arringtiinoons.com on the list is not going to garner the attention or the bids that the verizon names do. All I can say is thanks for providing me a topic for my blog. |
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| | #25 (permalink) | |
| Fiscal Conservative Name: RG Last Online: 10-31-2009 01:56 AM iTrader: (13) Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,874
DNF$: 20,092 Location: California
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| | #26 (permalink) |
| Dances With Dogs Name: info [@] gerry.mobi Last Online: Today 10:51 PM iTrader: (73) Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 10,293
DNF$: 25,477
Country: | In related issues, US Governments Still Trying To Regulate the Internet March 9th, 2009 · 3 Comments Two actions taken last week, in two separate jurisdictions, show that governments around the US are still intent on individually regulating the Internet. According to Media Post, on Friday, the Utah House of Representatives, narrowly passed H.B. 450, which would bar companies from using rivals’ trademarks to trigger ads on search engines, directories or other Web sites. -------------------------------- It is almost as if we (or this industry) is asking or daring someone to do something. And someone will. Then every one will ***** and complain and cry how unfair it is. |
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| | #27 (permalink) | ||
| Missing in action Name: Kate Last Online: Today 06:44 PM iTrader: (41) Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 4,668
DNF$: 28,093 Location: .cz
Country: | Who is in the opinion that verizonaccountonline.com is not a blatant TM ![]() Raise your hand. Don, I don't want them to censor the whole droplist, it's nobody's business. The issue is their selection. Quote:
You bet they're going to sue. I would. Quote:
The auction houses are greedy outfits that behave like there's no tomorrow. TBH I don't care about Verizon or their brands, but I do care about the implications for our business. What goes around, comes around.
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| | #28 (permalink) | ||
| The Evil Mod Name: Ed Last Online: Today 08:38 PM iTrader: (36) Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 8,341
DNF$: 436 Location: South Florida
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The registrar will point the domain to their parked page if the fee isn't paid (technically making them guilty of cyber-squatting). Plus, if they are one of the few who do monitor for it, any TM name being dropped will most likely go to auction since there are many people out there who would either blatantly exploit and try to profit off of the TM or take advantage of the already existing traffic. As for filtering the list, I'm taking a step back seeing how it could backfire. OK, Apple is a TM. They put Apple in their block list so it would block: ApplePie.com AppleTrees.com AppleTarts.com Applesauce.com None of which Apple computers would have any claim on (based on domain only, not usage). Pool (and any drop service) is just providing a service - domains that are going to be available to register on a certain date. Pay them a fee and they'll have one of their partners register it for you. Quote:
I agree with this but sadly, "the industry" only think that the domain owners would be affected, which nothing could be further from the truth. Verisign won't be affected except collecting more fees. - A win for them. Registrars won't be too affected by it since the names need to be registered somewhere and not many companies have their own registrars. Sure, they might get in less money with bulk registrations but that would just be a drop in the bucket. - I'll call this one a wash. Drop catch services would still be collecting fees on acquiring dropped domains for people. I'll call this one a wash, too. Parking companies and ad providers would lose out since many more domains would be snatched up and pointed to company websites. But, who cares about them? They only cater to unethical cyber-squatters, right? (That last part was sarcastic but how the general populace views them). They'll be a big loser. Does Google support the Snowe bill? Domain owners would be the biggest losers. Not only would companies be allowed to snatch up our high priced domains for fractions of a penny on the dollar (I can see Dell doing one of the first ones for Computers.com, Laptops.com etc..), it would also be easier for them to sue for "damages" (what they claim they lost in sales, legal fees) quickly putting any domain owner millions of dollars in debt.
__________________ Get a Parked.com account today! What's on Draggar's mind? Find out at http://www.draggar.net I'm always looking for dog breed domains Last edited by draggar; 03-10-2009 at 08:36 AM.. | ||
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