IncredibleArticles.com

Home

Contact Us

Author Guidelines

Terms of Service

New Member?

Author Login


Categories



Advertising
Automotive
Business
Computer
Entertainment
Finance
Food
Health
Home & Family
Internet
  Affiliate Programs
  Blogging
  Domains
  Email
  Forums
  Online Business
  PPC Advertising
  RSS
  SEO
  Site Promotion
  Spam
  Web Design
  Web Hosting
Legal
Science
Self Improvement
Shopping
Society
Sports
Travel
Writing



Partners
Promotional Money Clips
Custom Imprinted Balls
Imprinted Duffle Bags
Custom Imprinted Maglites
Caps
Custom Badge Holders
Custom Imprinted Mouse Pads
Promotional Key Fobs
Promotional Pocket Screwdrivers
Custom Key Tags
Calendars
Twist Pens
Bags
Imprinted Padfolios
Promotional Calendars
Custom Imprinted First Aid Kits
Promotional Business Products
Yardsticks
Promotional Bandages
Custom Imprinted Rulers

E-mail this article E-mail this article
Report this article Report this article
Publish this article Publish this article
IncredibleArticles.com - Internet - Domains

The ACPA: Fighting Cyber-Squatting

by Incredible Articles - Last Modified: 10/30/2007

ur law firm receives a lot of calls from people and companies who are being threatened with an Anti-Cyber Squatting Consumer Protection Act claim because they registered a domain name identical or similar to a trademark held by someone else. Inevitably, we hear the words â€Å"Network Solutions allowed me to register the domain, so there is no way someone can say that I did anything wrong.

Of course, Network Solutions and the other registrars do little to ensure that a person registering a domain has legal right to do so. In fact, about the only thing registrars do is make each person who purchases a domain affirm that they are not interfering with some else's legitimate trademark rights. The fact that you are able to register a domain doesn't mean that you won't get sued for having done so under federal law.

The ACPA is a federal law that took effect in November 1999, in order to preclude bad faith registration of domain names. This new domain name dispute law is intended to give trademark and service mark owners legal remedies against defendants who obtain domain names in bad faith that are identical or confusingly similar to a trademark or service mark. In order to win a case of cyber-squatting, plaintiff must prove that defendant has a bad faith intent to profit from the mark that is identical or confusingly similar or dilutes plaintiff's mark. The key element is that plaintiff must prove that defendant has â€Å"bad faith intent to profit from the mark.

Bad faith, however, is rarely attributed to a non-commercial operation, so merely registering a domain without intent to profit will make it difficult for the plaintiff to win relief. Typically, intent to profit is shown by the use of the domain as a commercial site which sells goods or services. For an alleged domain violator who does not develop a website, bad faith intent to profit is often evidenced by a defendant's attempts to sell the domain name to the trademark holder.

Another bad faith factor is if the registrant provides false contact information to the registrar or fails to maintain correct contact information as time goes on. This is why it is important for all domain name owners to check their domain registrations regularly in the Who's database to determine if their contact information is correct.

If you should decide to file an ACPA lawsuit, you have a variety of remedies which are available to you under the act. The most important one is potential forfeiture or cancellation of the domain name or transfer of the domain name to the plaintiff. In lieu of actual damages, the plaintiff may elect statutory damages and has discretion to award between htmlentities,000 and 0,000 in damages for bad faith registration. Attorney's fees are also available for a bad faith registration.

Difficulty often arises in that the domain owner cannot be found or served with a Summons and Complaint because they have provided false information or are not located within the United States. In these instances, a trademark owner may bring in In Rem action against the domain name in the judicial district in which the domain name registrar, domain name registry or other domain name authority that registered or assigned the domain name is located. Money damages are not available in an In Rem lawsuit. Typically, the trademark owner is more focused at having the domain name transferred to them.

One recent Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals case, Interactive Products, Corporation v. A2Z Mobile Office, No. 01-3590 (6th Cir., April 10, 2003), was not good news for trademark holders in our jurisdiction. The Court held that the post-domain path of a URL (the sub-file directory). . . does not typically signify source (of goods or services). The post-domain path merely shows how the website's data is organized within the host computer files. Accordingly, the Sixth Circuit held that the presence of plaintiff's trademark in the path of the domain name of a competitor was unlikely to cause consumer confusion. Interestingly, the Court reached this result even though the defendant, A2Z, was selling competing products. It should be noted that the Court did hold that using some else's trademark in the top level domain, on the website itself or in the meta tags is prohibited under the ACPA.

Each ACPA case turns on the particular facts presented. It should also be noted that the Interactive Products plaintiff did not present any evidence that the presence of its trademark in the post-domain path caused actual confusion or was likely to cause consumer confusion. If such evidence existed and was presented, the outcome could have been different. The ACPA in an important weapon for trademark holders in protecting their intellectual property in the online world, but only useful weapon if trademark owners remain vigilant on the Internet.
About the Author
Enrico Schaefer is the founding attorney of Traverse Legal, PLC, a high-tech law firm specializing in web law. You can find out more about protecting your domain name, UDRP arbitrations and anti-cybersquatting laws at Traverse Legal's domain name theft and trademark and intellectual property blogs.


This article has been viewed 12 times.

You may reprint this article. The HTML code below can be copied and pasted into your page to recreate the article in its simplest form with no formatting. Simply click inside the box, or right-click the box and choose Select All to select the entire contents. Then press Ctrl->c on your keyboard to copy the text to your clipboard. You can then paste it into the code for your own page.
You may modify the simple HTML tags in this code to suit your formatting needs, but the article title, byline, content, author bio and source credit must remain unchanged, and all links must be retained as active hyperlinks. You may not use images from our site.
Copyright ©2007 IncredibleArticles.com