nanog mailing list archives

Re: new.net: yet another dns namespace overlay play


From: "Christopher A. Woodfield" <rekoil () semihuman com>
Date: Wed, 7 Mar 2001 11:17:54 -0500


I know a guy whose name happens to be the same as a popular British 
designer clothing line. For privacy purposes, I'll call him, and the 
designer, Joe Blow. He owns and uses joeblow.com, and the designer has 
a website at joeblow.co.uk. But now the designer has decided that they 
want joeblow.com, and are sending in the landsharks.

If he can weather the legal storm, I think he'll win, because (a) it's him 
name and (b) he's actively using the domain. Have there been any cases of 
the original owner losing in a similar scenario?

-C

On Tue, Mar 06, 2001 at 07:48:39PM -0800, David Schwartz wrote:


Could someone point to a "reverse-hijacked" domain decision?

    Any one involving a person's name. The basic principle that you have a
right to use your name in trade (which simply means that no one can prevent
a name from being used!) has been turned on its head.

    DS



-- 
---------------------------
Christopher A. Woodfield                rekoil () semihuman com

PGP Public Key: http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xB887618B




Current thread: