Our 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 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
...you may not ever, ever add in new matter to that particular application. Here s what I mean by this. Let s suppose Jay s invention was rejected because his potato peeler is just too darn similar to what already ...
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
...newspaper articles, city business listings, periodicals, incorporation listings, DBAs, LLCs, etc. are examined for any name similarities. Although such businesses do not have a trademark, they might have "first-use rights" to the name. This could mean that they still have ...
...that it is fairly difficult to do so. Why? Well, none of us have any exclusive rights to the com , net or other suffixes out there. As such, the Trademark Office tends to dislike allowing their inclusion in marks. ...
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 $1,000
...newspaper articles, city business listings, periodicals, incorporation listings, DBAs, LLCs, etc. are examined for any name similarities. Although such businesses do not have a trademark, they might have "first-use rights" to the name. This could mean that they still have ...
One
...name would use a collective mark for branding and protecting their work, although the designers vary. Other areas of trademark to consider when registering your company or goods are trade dress and product configuration, which refer to the packaging and ...
...confident youwill be getting an on time shipment of the correct items and quantities atthe quality standards you require. This usually means you must incur inspection costs in China and provide for a clear procedurefor dealing with these problems as ...
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. If you do not protect your trademarks, you may lose rights in
...goods, such as Kleenex brand tissue. You may not write, She wiped her eyes with a kleenex. You could be sued. The generic (acceptable) form would be: She wiped her eyes with a tissue. Fair Use is the exception to ...
Enrico Schaefer is the founding attorney of Traverse Legal, PLC, a law firm specializing in [http://www.traverselegal.com]web law. You can find out more about protecting your domain name, UDRP arbitrations and anti-cybersquatting laws at Traverse Legal s [http://tcattorney.typepad.com/domainnamedispute/]domain name theft and [http://tcattorney.typepad.com/ip/]trademark blogs.














0 responses so far ↓
There are no comments yet...Kick things off by filling out the form below.
Leave a Comment