Entries Tagged as ''

Brandowners Warn Against Cybersquatting, User Confusion from New Internet Domains

Brandowners Warn Against Cybersquatting, User Confusion From New
Intellectual Property Watch, Switzerland - 4 hours ago
Applicants for the new generic top-level domains still have to wait until the second quarter 2009 before ICANN will start accepting applications.

Some think the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers should have moved much faster to introduce new names in the internet to join the likes of .com and .org. Others moan about the widespread trademark infringement they expect to occur when the private internet governance body introduces several long-awaited new top-level domains. But the prospect of news about the next round in extending the global domain name space has brought them all to ICANN’s Paris meeting that might emerge as the largest in the organisation’s history.

More than 1,400 participants attended Monday’s opening day and every seat was taken in the new top-level domain (TLD) workshop Monday afternoon, where people fantasised about .moon, proposed .hiv or pointed to nearly finished proposals for .berlin – “the mothership of all city TLDs” that has been around for more than three years right now.

Susan Kawaguchi, global domain name manager for online trading site eBay, said her company would have a look at all new TLDs, but would not register in every new zone. From her point of view special interest TLDs like .aero – the TLD for the airline industry managed by Air Transport Communications and IT solutions (SITA) – are acceptable for the owners of big brands, but new, open TLDs that allow registration by anybody (and not limited to a special interest group or community) would require either registering or enforcing.

“Either way it is a lot of work,” warned Kawaguchi. Brandowners, she said, are not prepared to provide income for the new generic TLD registries during their sunrise periods during which early name registrations can be made.

Even more menacing sounded Jay Scott Evans, former chair of ICANN’s Intellectual Property Constituency and senior legal advisor for Yahoo. “Why should brand owners have to invest huge amounts of money to protect their brands,” he asked, simply because ICANN did not put the trademarks on a reserved list containing geographical names that all governments would have had to block in all TLD zones.

“The day is coming when some aggressive trademark owner will start litigation against either ICANN, the registry or the registrar,” Evans said. All of these parties knew that trademark infringement was a possibility, “because it had been happening for years and you facilitated it and are liable as a facilitator,” he charged. Brandowners should be protected because hundreds of thousands of their customers were misled by infringed or squatted websites, he said.

Caroline Perriard from Nestlé warned that users would be confused by too many extensions. Companies should register .nestlé or .ebay to profit from the domain name system extension, recommended Rob Hall, CEO, from Canadian Momentous. But the big brand owners are reluctant. Traffic would be forwarded to ebay.de or ebay.fr anyway, said Kawaguchi.

John Berryhill, an IP lawyer, claimed many “landowners” in cyberspace fear that prices would go down if there was a bigger supply of “land.” It is a question of whether colonisation of new continents would be allowed, Berryhill said, adding that trial and error and the choices of the seven billion internet users would lead to the winning TLDs.

Despite earlier ICANN consideration of a start of the new gTLD application process in 2008 the timeline given in Paris provides breathing-space for the concerned. Applicants for the new generic top-level domains still have to wait until the second quarter 2009 before ICANN will start accepting applications.

ICANN wanted to give newcomers at least four months after the publication of the final request for proposal that will be published by the end of the year or first quarter of 2009. The timeline should allow ICANN to reach out to newcomers internationally and create a level playing field between them and all the ICANN “cognoscenti” that were ready to go, ICANN Senior Vice President Kurt Pritz said in Paris. A number of city TLDs have been working for some time, especially .berlin, and are urgently waiting for the start. The New York City Council this week might give green light for .nyc, and the Paris mayor may take a position on .paris on Wednesday.

But details of ICANN’s complex procedure still have to be finalised.

Non-contentious gTLD applications have to pass through application, evaluation, delegation and approval phases. If there is an objection against the TLD name (on grounds of confusing similarity, rights infringement, morality or community objection) or the same string has been applied for by somebody else, additional procedural steps are necessary, including possible outside dispute resolution or auction for competing applications.

The final price structure so far is not available and possible refunding mechanisms for applicants who withdraw their applications during the procedure while expected to be possible are still not published.

In the end, the country code TLD (ccTLD) managers might win the race. Parallel to the discussions about the introduction of new gTLDs, a fast track for non-Latin-based ccTLDs is being pushed in Paris. Pressure to move in that regard is great, observers said. For instance, China is waiting to have test Chinese-language Internet domain name address zones registered in the root. And for the first time, a Russian observer participated in the ICANN meeting. “We would be very happy if ICANN would decide on the issue this week,” Vladimir Vasilyev, deputy director at the Ministry for Telecommunications and Mass Communications of the Russian Federation, told Intellectual Property Watch.

Only about a week ago, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev had announced that he would favour a ccTLD in Cyrillic. Now the Bulgarian State Agency for Information Technologies and Communications (SAITC) have joined their Russian colleagues and are pursuing the issue at the Paris meeting. In a letter to ICANN President Paul Twomey, SAITC announced that Bulgaria has decided to register and maintain the country code in Cyrillic.

ICANN consists of numerous constituent groups. In the preparatory talks of the ICANN Government Advisory Committee (GAC) and the Country Code Name Standing Organization (ccNSO), ICANNs body for ccTLD policies, governments clearly showed their muscles. An agreement or contract with ICANN for introducing the new non-Latin ccTLDs was not acceptable, said Chris Dispain, chair of the ccNSO. An original limitation to only one ccTLD per country has been erased from the current draft, because some countries use several scripts. Any objection procedure for the chosen string – that has to represent the countries name – was also unthinkable.

Not everybody in the community is happy that the ccTLDs by using the fast track procedure with much time for a regular procedure to talk about afterwards might start early. Neither side should disadvantage the other, said Chuck Gomes of VeriSign, speaking as a representative of the Generic Name Supporting Organisation at a GAC meeting. The ICANN Board will decide on Thursday which one will move and which one will not.

The race is on to get your own Internet domain – International Herald Tribune

The race is on to get your own Internet domain
International Herald Tribune, France - 1 hour ago
A “generic top-level domain” is essentially the label for the letters that come after the dot in an Internet name. Dot-com is the most celebrated, .

When Internet regulators started gathering in the French capital last week for a global conference that starts here Monday, the marquee event was a quirky catwalk for cities and regions competing for domain names like .berlin, .paris, .quebec and even .cat – for Catalonia.

The mighty dot, New York City boosters said, could transform the metropolis into “the master of its future,” with a .nyc label helping to build “trust, justice and civic pride.” Berlin supporters insisted that a super-dot would establish the city’s global reputation.

Super or not, officials at the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers – the main oversight agency for the underpinnings of the Internet – said they were poised to bring the most dramatic change to the Internet in four decades by opening up domain names to endless variations.

“We’re talking about introducing potentially thousands more names,” said Paul Levins, executive officer of Icann, the California-based nonprofit company that is the host of the Paris conference, which has drawn more than 1,300 delegates from 130 countries. “The addressing system hasn’t fundamentally changed since its invention. These changes have the potential to have a huge impact on the way we express ourselves on the Net.”

A “generic top-level domain” is essentially the label for the letters that come after the dot in an Internet name. Dot-com is the most celebrated, but the handful of existing domains range from .asia and .travel to .biz, .info and .mobi.

After debating the system for years, Icann’s board is poised to vote on whether to set up the broad criteria for approving new domain names with limitless possibilities. It would allow companies to turn their own brands into domains or to create broad product groups such as .car, .sports or .bank – all candidates for dots. Ebay is already a contender to use its name, according to Levins, who added, “You can imagine the branding opportunities.”

If, as expected, the 21-member international board adopts a new system, the vote would set in motion a process that eventually would start to open up the Internet to hundreds of new names by the beginning of next year.

With the current system, some inventive cities and companies have already maneuvered to virtually seize their own domains.

Many Los Angeles companies adopted the .la label for Laos while Bavarian government agencies in Germany registered .by from Belarus, part of the former Soviet Republic. The tiny nations of Tuvalu (.tv) and the federated states of Micronesia (.fm) have also ceded their domains to media companies, reaping millions of dollars in licensing fees from third-party registrars that are not connected to the countries.

But other cities do not want to borrow from obscure republics. The city of New York has been angling for its own dot since 2001, but most domain candidates agree that Berlin appears to be moving the furthest. A separate company, called dot-Berlin, was formed to campaign for a domain, and it has signed up nearly a dozen corporate sponsors, from the Grand Hyatt hotel to Lotto Berlin and the local yellow pages publisher.

“We saw there was a growing need in countries like Germany with very dense and complicated names,” said Johannes Lenz-Hawliczek, a spokesman for the company, which has three employees. “There is a need for significant and easy-to-remember and intuitive addresses.”

The pressure to open up the system to allow more choices comes at a time when the Internet’s addresses are rapidly being depleted with the explosion of computers and devices that connect to it. By last autumn, Icann estimated that only 17 percent of an available pool of 4 billion network addresses remained, and they are expected to run out in the next five years.

While passage of the plan is expected, some opponents say the new system would create bureaucratic headaches for companies fending off people seeking to create new domains that infringe on their trademarks.

At its meeting this week, Icann is also promoting an additional, number-based address system, IPv6, which could add trillions of new addresses. But international adoption of the new standards has been slow, in part because of the costs of switching and concerns that the new technical standard will make it easier for governments or companies to track what individuals are doing on the Internet.

In preparation to dazzle Internet regulators, a number of the city and regional candidates for domain names met together on Friday for what was billed as the “2008 Top Level Domain Catwalk” to try to persuade any doubters about the benefits of opening up the naming system.

“It’s better to have a community,” said Sébastien Bachollet, who is leading the .paris campaign, which started last May.

“If you have a dedicated population for .paris, it will help people to understand what they’re using and how to use it.”

The Paris project is in its infancy and trying to enlist financial backers, while the Berlin project has raised almost €1 million from sponsors. Many other cities estimate that they will need about that amount to negotiate through the bureaucratic process.

Other organizers in New York and Hamburg have created nonprofit groups in a bid to build community support for the names.

The application fee for a domain name under the proposed system has not been set, but candidates estimate that it could range from €25,000 to €250,000, or about $39,000 to $390,000. Icann is also prepared to set up an auction system if competing groups bid for the same name. Private companies would reap their profit by selling the domain names to registrars, which would then sell them to individual customers.

Icann is also setting up standards that would allow the regulator to reject applications from people who try to grab trademarked names or to rebuff proposals on moral grounds or because of community objections.

“They’ve discussed scenarios where someone wants to have .football and how to cope with it if it means soccer or football. And they’ve also talked about what happens if someone proposes .jihad,” said Lenz-Hawliczek, from the Berlin project. “It’s a really complex issue, and we’ve been discussing it for the past three years. It’s not easy.”

The Berlin company has learned that lesson through hard experience. Last year, some politicians raised questions about protecting their own site, Berlin.de, because they did not want to compete with a .berlin portal. Those are some of the same delicate issues that organizers are facing in other cities when they approach officials for their blessings.

Online travel market hit by cybersquatters – Economic Times

Online travel market hit by cybersquatters
Economic Times, India - 3 hours ago
Vendors, essentially cybersquatters, are using brand names of popular travel portals as their domain names and also in their content to generate
The $2-billion online travel market is the latest to be hit by cybersquatters. Vendors, essentially cybersquatters, are using brand names of popular travel portals as their domain names and also in their content to generate traffic-sometimes by even hoodwinking the consumer.

So, don’t be surprised if next time you ‘google’ the name of a travel portal to book your dream vacation and are directed to websites such as mytripyatra.com, cleartrip.net.in (instead of cleartrip.com) or indiatimestravel.com (instead of travel.indiatimes.com).

With the market for online portals hotting up with many new players entering the space, it has also caught attention of squatters eyeing quick bucks. “Online travel as a segment is quite popular among internet users,” says Travelguru CEO Ashwin Damera. “Therefore, it has seen mushrooming of websites which are mainly ’squatter websites’ or ‘domain parking sites’……

NameMedia Partners with Tucows – Web Host Industry Review

NameMedia Partners with Tucows
Web Host Industry Review - 5 hours ago
Tucows is now offering thousands of daily expired domains for auction on Afternic (afternic.com) that the public can bid on and purchase.

Tucows is now offering thousands of daily expired domains for auction on Afternic (afternic.com) that the public can bid on and purchase.

Last week, Register.com and SnapNames renewed a similar partnership where SnapNames is exclusively offering previously unavailable domain names registered with Register.com on its auction website.

The partnership will bring in an additional 100,000 or more, premium domains from Tucows each month to Afternic inventory, further enhancing the selection of domain options for Afternic’s small business customer base.

Since there is a considerable demand for domain names that are already registered, NameMedia says the Afternic Domain Listing Service offers an……

One Word Domain Name Sales Reach Record Levels – PR.com (press release)

One Word Domain Name Sales Reach Record Levels
PR.com (press release), NY - 42 minutes ago
Due to outrageous prices being fetched by 1 word domain names, a new market has emerged surrounding 2 and 3 word .com extensions. Phoenix, AZ, June 11,

In April, pizza.com sold for 2.6 million, not to be outdone by fund.com fetching a record $10 million in May by broker Clek Media. Due to record prices being fetched for these 1 word domain names, a new market is emerging for multiple word extensions.

Industry giants ArrowBranding.com & HugeDomains.com are seeing record sales for their 2 and 3 word domains. Analysts believe that most decent 2 word domains will be gobbled up by the end of the decade.

Clek believes that the nearly $10 million purchase price for fund.com represents the highest price ever paid for an Internet domain. The purchase price tops what the Guinness World Records books report as the highest previous price, the memorable business.com purchase. Ex-Disney executive, Jake Winebaum of eCompanies Ventures, acquired business.com for $7.5 million in 1999, which created some public media controversy at that time for the seemingly high price. However, in July 2007 business.com was sold to yellow pages publisher, RH Donnelly, for $345 million, 47 times the purchase price of the domain.

Business and Wall Street investors continue to assign higher values to internet domains. According to MSNBC, the domain creditcards.com was acquired for $2.75 million all-cash and SEC filings reveal that the $20 billion hedge fund, American Capital Strategies, and Austin Ventures invested $135 million in creditcards.com. Regarding the creditcards.com sale, MSNBC quoted ClickSuccess CEO Dan Smith, “It’s like prime real estate, there’s only so much of this real estate to go around. I feel like we bought a slice of Park Avenue.”

Have a 2 or 3 word domain you’ve been holding onto? Now may be the time to cash in.

Introducing Number Only Domain Names from .NU Domain – TMCnet

Introducing Number Only Domain Names from .NU Domain
TMCnet - 1 hour ago
COM address but NU domain claims there are many more .NU addresses available. For example the English word ‘Food’ will be 3663 on the phone pad,
The manager of the .NU Domain has stated that it will start letting registration of .nu names with numbers only from June 10 onwards
A .NU Web Address works just like a .COM address but NU domain claims there are many more .NU addresses available.
For example the English word ‘Food’ will be 3663 on the phone pad, and customers who want to register a domain in the name ‘food’ can register their domain name with numbers as 3663.nu.
Initial registration for .NU Domain’s numbers only domain names will start at 12:01 UTC on June 10, on a first-come, first-served basis.
“Demand for numbers-only domain names has really taken off in the past year across several top level domains”, said J. William Semich, CEO of .NU Domain. “We expect to see a lot of activity as customers compete to get the combination of numbers they want the most”.

Numeric Names Service will have two price-classes for numbers-only domain names: A Premium Numeric Name consisting of just 3 characters (like 212.nu) and a Standard Numeric Name consisting of any combination of numbers and hyphens up to 63 characters long……


.NU Domain Launches Numeric Domain Names Business Wire (press release)
all 9 news articles

Travelforless.com for Sale

“Travelforless.com” for Sale

The Widely Sought-After Travel Domain Name since 1996

Also included in the sale: U.S. Registered Trademark # 2599833

According to a company press release, “We are now open to offers for what many believe is the premier Internet domain name for online travel services. Ultimately, people want to ‘travel for less.’ What domain name could possibly be better than Travelforless.com?”

The company is making the domain name available through Ebay

The Auction ends Jun-13-08 06:00:00 PDT