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October 16, 2006

Wal-Mart loses case for control of boycottwalmart.com | The Register

Wal-Mart loses case for control of boycottwalmart.com | The Register:


The world's largest retailer Wal-Mart has failed in its attempt to gain control of the web address boycottwalmart.com. An arbitration panel has ruled that it was unlikely that visitors would be confused and think that it was a Wal-Mart site.
Domain name disputes are settled by the arbitration panel of the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO). That body has ruled that Wal-Mart cannot have control of the disputed domain.

The domain is controlled by Traffic Yoon of South Korea, a company which put up no defence in the case. Wal-Mart argued that the domain name was "confusingly similar" to its own addresses, which is not permitted.
"Since [Wal-Mart's] mark is embedded in the disputed domain name, it is hard to say there is no similarity, but finding that the disputed domain name is similar to the Complainant’s marks is not sufficient," said the WIPO decision. "The critical question in this Panel’s view on this aspect of the Policy is whether the similarity is “confusing”."

October 04, 2006

Google ducks a legal bullet | Perspectives | CNET News.com

Google ducks a legal bullet | Perspectives | CNET News.com:


In the mostly uncharted territory of Internet jurisprudence, Google's policy of selling keywords has won a legal reprieve--at least for now.

A recent court ruling says Google is within its rights to include Internet links from competitors to a trademark holder when people search on the corporate name.

In a trademark lawsuit, computer franchiser Rescuecom had complained that when people typed its name into the Google search engine, the results would include URLs from competing Web sites. While U.S. District Court Judge Norman Mordue accepted the allegations in the trademark lawsuit Rescuecom filed against Google as true, he still dismissed the case.

June 20, 2006

Yahoo! sued by dating site over Google keywords | OUT-LAW.COM

Yahoo! sued by dating site over Google keywords | OUT-LAW.COM:


Yahoo! is being sued for allegedly paying to trigger adverts when a dating site's name is typed into Google. The owner of Lovecity.com accuses Yahoo!, which also runs a dating service, and three other companies, of infringing its trade marks.

Advertising words in Google have stirred up recent controversy as companies use similar techniques to gain an edge on competitors. Courts have given mixed rulings so far in cases involving such brands as Geico, Zocor and Edina Realty.

In the Yahoo! case, JP Enterprises says that Yahoo!, HDVE LLC, Spark Networks and Insight Direct USA are guilty of trade mark dilution and infringement. It claims that anyone typing "www.lovecity.com", "lovecity" or "lovecity.com" into the search engine is presented with adverts on the side of the page detailing the services of the named competing companies.

June 02, 2006

Morgan Stanley takes domain name from cat | The Register

Morgan Stanley takes domain name from cat | The Register:


A cat has lost its bid to retain a controversial domain name after a multinational investment bank took it to the National Arbitration Forum.

Baroness Penelope Cat of Nash DCB, who is listed as the owner of mymorganstanleyplatinum.com and was given some assistance in the case by Michael Woods, lost control of the domain to Morgan Stanley.

A key part of the case rested on whether or not Baroness Penelope was truly the owner of the domain. The first indication that the decision was unlikely to veer cat-wards came in the written decision of Arbitration Forum Panellist Richard Hill.

"Respondent maintains that it is a cat, that is, a well-known carnivorous quadruped which has long been domesticated," summarised Hill. "However, it is equally well-known that the common cat, whose scientific name is Felis domesticus, cannot speak or read or write."

Baroness Penelope argued in its submission that "the registration information is not false; there are an immense number of Domain Names registered by non human beings".

Hill was not to be swayed, however. "A common cat could not have submitted the Response (or even have registered the disputed domain name)," he wrote. "Therefore, either Respondent is a different species of cat, such as the one that stars in the motion picture 'Cat From Outer Space,' or Respondent's assertion regarding its being a cat is incorrect."

"If Respondent is in fact a cat from outer space, then it should have so indicated in its reply, in order to avoid unnecessary perplexity by the Panel."

In order to retain the domain name, Baroness Penelope had to fulfill three criteria. Having failed the first two, the case rested on whether or not having a cat as a registered owner of a domain constituted "bad faith". Hill ruled that it did.

Baroness Penelope was uncontactable for comment at the time of going to press.

See: the ruling

March 21, 2006

Google Sued Over Page Rank

Google Sued Over Page Rank:


Technology & Marketing Law Blog: Google Sued Over Rankings - KinderStart.com v. Google.



March 20, 2006

CIRA Suspends Participation in ICANN

CIRA Suspends Participation in ICANN:


The Canadian Internet Registration Authority (CIRA) has issued a public letter to ICANN calling on the organization to follow accountable, transparent, and fair processes. Until the concerns are addressed, CIRA says it is suspending its voluntary contributions to ICANN... more...

March 17, 2006

Google, AOL still working out details of business deal

Google, AOL still working out details of business deal:


Blog: Google and America Online are still working out the details of their renewed business relationship. According to documents Google...

March 16, 2006

EarthLink invests $50 million in Covad | CNET News.com

EarthLink invests $50 million in Covad | CNET News.com:


EarthLink said Thursday that it has made a $50 million equity investment in Covad Communications Group to fund the expansion of the companies' co-developed voice services to eight new markets.

As part of the deal, EarthLink will receive $10 million in Covad common shares and $40 million in convertible debt, due in 2011.

Covad, a broadband access wholesaler, will use the money to fund infrastructure construction so that EarthLink can offer its line-powered voice service using the Covad network in Atlanta, Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Philadelphia, San Diego and Washington, D.C.

March 15, 2006

What Right in Digital Actors?

What Right in Digital Actors?:


A Copyfight reader pointed me to a Slate story on digital thespians. Epstein talks about two kinds of digital creations: wholly new 'synthespians' as well as digitized representations of actual actors (Tom Hanks for Polar Express; Sean Connery for the From Russia with Love game). Although the technical hurdles to such captures remain quite large - especially if your goal is true-to-life, fool-an-audience reproduction - the reader's question was different.

To wit: what rights do you purchase/license/contract for in creating such a reproduction of a real person? Rights to the "likeness?" Performance rights? Do either of these cover things the actor never physically did or said? Is there an exclusivity clause? There are clearly some issues around the ownership of a character, if that character has appeared before (e.g. Connery's Bond) but usually the character rights reside with the studio. But if you want the Connery Bond instead of a generic James Bond you also have to incude Connery in the deal, as well as whatever studio or estate has the Bond character rights.

IANAL, but I'm hoping some of my readers are or can point me to resources from people who've actually worked in this area.



March 14, 2006

BBC NEWS | Technology | Google set for court in data spat

BBC NEWS | Technology | Google set for court in data spat:


Google is to take on the US government in court on Tuesday as the internet search engine fights demands to hand over records and lists of data.
The Justice Department wants Google to provide a week's worth of search records, saying it needs the data to help it better police cyberspace.

But Google complains that complying with the request would compromise its business and the privacy of its users.

Similar requests were made of other net firms such as Microsoft, Yahoo and AOL.



UltraDNS Extends Leading Managed DNS Service Behind the Corporate Firewall

UltraDNS Extends Leading Managed DNS Service Behind the Corporate Firewall:


Managed internal DNS service provides a high performance, cost-effective solution to address the increased complexity of corporate IP networks. more...

Answers from Vint Cerf: The Road Ahead for Top-Level Domains

Answers from Vint Cerf: The Road Ahead for Top-Level Domains:


Earlier this year we requested your questions on one of ICANN's most heated discussions -- issues involving top-level domains (TLDs) -- which we passed on to Vint Cerft, Google's VP and Chief Internet Evangelist and chairman of the board of ICANN. Despite an understandably heavy schedule, Vint Cerf has taken the time to personally respond to more questions than we had originally anticipated. So with a special thanks, here are his responses. more...

February 24, 2006

Yahoo To Ban Bidding On Competitor Trademarks To Stop Comparison Advertising

Yahoo To Ban Bidding On Competitor Trademarks To Stop Comparison Advertising:


Yahoo No Longer Allow Bidding On Trademarked Terms on our SEW Forums has news that Yahoo will no longer be allowing companies to purchase ads linked to the trademarks of their competitors. From what's being sent to advertisers:

On March 1, 2006, Yahoo! Search Marketing will modify its editorial guidelines regarding the use of keywords containing trademarks. Previously, we allowed competitive advertising by allowing advertisers to bid on third-party trademarks if those advertisers offered detailed comparative information about the trademark owner's products or services in comparison to the competitive products and services that were offered or promoted on the advertiser's site.

In order to more easily deliver quality user experiences when users search on terms that are trademarks, Yahoo! Search Marketing has determined that we will no longer allow bidding on keywords containing competitor trademarks.

February 05, 2006

Warner Brothers Loses DaisyDukes.com Complaint

Warner Brothers Loses DaisyDukes.com Complaint:


Warner Brothers Entertainment, which owns the rights to The Dukes of Hazzard and related characters, including DAISY DUKE, failed in its UDRP case against the registrant of the domain name DaisyDukes.com. The Panelist determined that although WB had common law rights in the DAISY DUKE mark and the registrant lacked rights and legitimate interests in the DaisyDukes.com domain name, WB failed to demonstrate that the registrant had registered and used the domain name in bad faith. more...

January 25, 2006

Very good "fair use" opinion re Google's cache

Very good "fair use" opinion re Google's cache:


A district court in Nevada has rejected the claim that Google’s cache violates copyright law. The opinion is grounded both on “fair use” and implied license. The “fair use” part of the opinion is fantastic. But interestingly, the “implied license” part of the opinion weakens any such claim in the context of Google Book Search.



WIPO Responds to Significant Cybersquatting Activity In 2005

WIPO Responds to Significant Cybersquatting Activity In 2005:


In a report released today, the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) has announced a 20% increase in the number of cybersquatting (abusive registration of trademarks as domain names) cases filed in 2005 as compared to 2004. The report further indicates that "in 2005, a total of 1,456 cybersquatting cases were filed with WIPO's Arbitration and Mediation Center. This increase represents the highest number of cybersquatting cases handled by the WIPO Center since 2001."

January 20, 2006

Domain Name Containing Trademark Translation is Determined Confusingly Similar

Domain Name Containing Trademark Translation is Determined Confusingly Similar:


Interesting WIPO case (D2005-1085): Complainant (Saint-Exupery estate) owns "Le Petit Prince" in EU, US, and other countries. The translation of "Le Petit Prince" is "The little prince". Respondent registered 'thelittleprince.com'. Is such a domain name confusingly similar to the trademark?

January 13, 2006

The Million TM-infringement homepage? (Wendy Seltzer)

The Million TM-infringement homepage? (Wendy Seltzer):


How many trademark infringements can you spot in the The Million Dollar Homepage? Among all the ads for free porn, free domain names, and free gambling (only the first click is free), I spot least eBay and Yahoo! logos that don't go to those companies' websites. I can't tell whether they're associated listing services, click-through affiliate links, or phishing expeditions, but I imagine the companies would have a decent trademark claim against someone who used the logos for unrelated commercial gain. Even those offering companion services, such as eBay listing facilitators, might not win with a TM fair use defense.

See this Washington Post story for more on the site and its bubble-story.



January 06, 2006

law.com - Chat Room Chatter Draws Lawsuit

law.com - Chat Room Chatter Draws Lawsuit:


Do the courts have jurisdiction over what people say in Internet chat rooms?

That question is being played out in what some lawyers claim is a first-of-its-kind lawsuit in Ohio, where a man claims he was humiliated online in an Internet chat room, and has filed a lawsuit over the incident.

The plaintiff, George Gillespie of Medina County, Ohio, is suing America Online for allegedly failing to do anything about the abuse he endured in the chat room, and the two chat room participants who allegedly caused him emotional distress by teasing him. Gillespie v. America Online, No. 05CIV1255 (Medina Co., Ohio, Ct. C.P.).

According to court documents, the chat room participants "acted in an outrageous manner, which they knew or should have known would cause serious emotional distress to the plaintiff ... The Defendants' conduct was so extreme and contemptible as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency."

December 30, 2005

Man Pleads Guilty to Rolling Own Botnet - John Quarterman

Man Pleads Guilty to Rolling Own Botnet:


A man, Anthony Scott Clark,
rolled his own botnet, using a worm to take over 20,000 computers,
which he then used to launch a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack
on eBay and others in July and August 2003.
Now he's

plead guilty
in U.S. District Court in San Jose, 27 December 2005.
He could get 10 years in prison, a quarter million dollar fine, etc.,
notes
Paul Ferguson.


It's good that a bot herder got caught and may get time.
But this one was unusual, indiscreet, and probably easier to catch than most.


Apparently he actually sent the worm out himself and used the resulting
very large botnet himself.
Most bot herders don't do that.
They use off the shelf software,
they build smaller botnets, and they sell access to them to third parties
which then use them for spamming, phishing, pharming, DDoS, or whatever.
So this guy stuck his head up too high and got caught.
Let's see some harder cases get caught, too.


The worm used a Windows bug; no surprise.
Once again,
software diversity

would make this sort of thing more difficult.


The worm was controled via Internet Relay Chat (IRC),
the bot herder's communication medium of choice.
Nothing new in that.


Any convictions of bot herders may help convince them to move on to some
safer field of crime, but the law is still a slow blunt instrument and
this time caught only the most obvious of suspects.


-jsq

Google Sued for Trademark Infringement Based on Third-Level Subdomain

Google Sued for Trademark Infringement Based on Third-Level Subdomain:


It's no surprise that Google has been sued again for trademark infringement, but the basis of this lawsuit is surprising. Rather than another lawsuit over the sale of trademarked keywords to deliver ads (along the lines of the GEICO, American Blinds, Rescuecom and JTH Tax cases, or the dozens of international lawsuits), this lawsuit is based on a Blogspot blog URL. Because of its comparative novelty, this lawsuit raises some complex and unsettled legal issues.

December 06, 2005

Is a Domain Name Property?

Is a Domain Name Property?:


In an article by Sheldon Burshtein, published in the Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice, the author examines the view on whether domain names are properties. The following is the abstract of this article: "...Domain names have become increasingly valuable assets, in some respects more valuable than trade marks. A domain name may identify not only the source of the goods, services, business or information, but also the virtual location of the source, much as an address or telephone number does. However, there is still a significant unresolved issue as to whether a domain name is a form of intangible property or merely a contractual right."

Investigations into ICANN transparency continue | The Register

Investigations into ICANN transparency continue | The Register:


A new lobbying body calling itself itself the Campaign for ICANN Transparency (CFIT) has expanded its investigation into the internet overseeing organisation with a freedom of information request served on the US Department of Commerce.
The organisation has already served ICANN with a lawsuit in its home state of California claiming anti-trust abuses, and caused the EC to open an anti-competition investigation following a formal complaint.

Now it hopes to discover examples of ICANN being less than truthful by requesting "materials related to discussions, memos and meetings and related contact that the government agency has had with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) on matters relating to the .net and .com registry agreements".

December 02, 2005

A View From Vancouver - Karl Auerbach

A View From Vancouver:


This is the strangest of ICANN meetings.  Several registrars sit in the lobby making deals; other registrars are very angry about the Verisign-ICANN "settlement"; there are domain name owners who are equally ticked off about the same thing; there are the .xxx people wearing scowls, GAC people wearing deep blue, and often shiny, suits; there are trade booths (wo-)manned with folks who could be easily mistaken for trade show bunnies; a small number of board members pass through the public areas in as short of time as they can; a larger number of board members are unseen; and ICANN "staff" is largely invisible.


Barely anybody talks about WSIS. But there is a lot of talk about lawsuits filed or contemplated.


There is a lot of quiet talk about how .xxx was suddenly removed from the agenda and how a redacted Freedom Of Information (FOIA) inquiry indicates that the Bush Administration, in the person of Karl Rove and at the behest of religious fundamentalist James Dotson, caused the US Department of Commerce to secretly instruct ICANN to deny .xxx and thus triggering a dance of the proxies as ICANN and/or the US government attempted to create a screen of deniability by getting other countries to do the dirty work.


Nobody here seems to support the ICANN-Verisign "settlement", although nobody seems to really think that ICANN will listen to the nearly universal complaints beyond making a few cosmetic adjustments.


Those who actually use domain names, the community of internet users, are nearly completely absent; the ALAC meetings were so under-attended that they could be squeezed into a small room at the end of a nearly hidden corridor.  Even as UN is demonized for its incorrectly characterized attempt to "take over the internet", at least the formative UN Internet Governance Forum will probably allow individuals to obtain credentials while ICANN relegates us to a powerless limbo.


There is talk of the splitting of the internet, not as something to come but rather as something that has already happened.  And that impossible as it is to trivalize the situation when the split involves China and other Asian nations ICANN has managed to pretend as if nothing of significance has happened.


And in a bit of stunning Orwellian NewSpeak the United States Federal Trade commission said that to protect privacy it has to kill it.


Matters of IP address policy are not discussed.


Questions about the fate of the 40 TLD applications left over from year 2000, for which ICANN collected $2,000,000, remain unanswered while a very glitzy and expensively printed, but otherwise vacuous and self-congratulatory, booklet from ICANN's ombudsman occupies space on the information tables.



November 27, 2005

Top News Article | Reuters.com

Top News Article | Reuters.com:


AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - A Dutch technology company has breathed life into a project to rid the Internet of suffixes such as .com, and instead offer single names which can be countries, company names or fantasy words.

Such a system, which enables countries, individuals and firms to have a Web address which consists of a single name, offers flexibility and is language and character independent.

"The plan is to offer names in any character set," said Erik Seeboldt, managing director of Amsterdam-based UnifiedRoot.

UnifiedRoot offers practically unlimited numbers of suffixes, unlike the short list of suffixes currently in use. Its offer is different from other "alternative root" providers such as New.net which offers to register names in front of a small range of new suffixes, such as .club and .law.

"We've already had thousands of registrations in a single day," said Seeboldt after the official opening of his 100-strong company which has installed 13 Internet domain name system (DNS) root servers on four continents.

Dutch airport Schiphol is one of the early customers. Registering a name costs $1,000 plus an annual fee of $240. Companies can then invent additional Web site addresses in front of their top-level domain (TLD) name, such as flights.schiphol or parking.schiphol.

Critics argue alternative root companies such as UnifiedRoot introduce ambiguity because they bring a new set of traffic rules to the Web which are, certainly in the beginning, only recognized by a limited number of computers around the world.

"Those who claim to be able to add new 'suffixes' or 'TLDs' are generally pirates or con-men with something to sell," said Paul Vixie, who sits in several committees of the California-based Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) with day-to-day control of the Web, on his CircleID blog.

WELCOME

Others are more welcoming.

"The existence of alternate roots, and the possibility of new ones, provides a useful competitive check on ICANN," said Jon Weinberg, a member of ICANNwatch which keeps a critical eye on ICANN.    Continued ...


BS?

BS?:


Recently ICANN's
Chairman was thus quoted
:



Q: Critics say the U.S. government basically controls the Internet.


A: That's bulls—t. I'm sorry, I'm not supposed to say that to reporters, but that's just a very bad misunderstanding. Ninety-nine percent of the Internet is in private hands. If you've got a computer at home, and a cable box or DSL line, you own a piece of the Internet. Most of the Internet is owned by the private sector, by businesses, by ISPs, by individuals, by governments—well, that's not [the] private sector, but it's not ICANN either and it's not the United States.



Rubbish.


The Internet is like the sea - the vast bulk is not subject to any particular
authority.


However like the seas, the Internet has its Panama and its Suez; the internet
has its Molucca Straits.


ICANN stands astride the naming systems of the internet just as Panama,
Egypt, and Indonesia stand over the oceans' most critical shipping lanes.


ICANN sprung from the loins of United States Department of Commerce. 
The DoC frequently denies its role as parent, but it has most overtly and
forcefully confirmed ICANN's dependency on, and subservience to, the United
States.


Nothing happens at the top layer of the internet's naming system without
ICANN approval.  And nothing happens in ICANN that is not subject to the
advice and consent of the United States Department of Commerce.


The Department of Commerce/ICANN system has suppressed competition, has cost
consumers of domain names billions of dollars, and has obstructed innovation
across the entire internet.  ICANN has destroyed the internet end-to-end
principle by forcing decisions about top level domains to flow through ICANN's
expensive and arbitrary procedures.


So for ICANN's chairman to imply that the US government is not using ICANN to
control a critical part of the internet is an exercise in misdirection and is,
ultimately, untrue.


And to add insult to injury, ICANN has adopted rules, most notably the
privacy-busting WHOIS and the trademark-uber-alles UDRP that reach out and
impose a supra national law on all of those end-user "personal"
computers that ICANN's chairman claims are not the property of the US or under
the control of ICANN.  If the US or ICANN do not have internet-wide powers,
then why are we users of the internet forced to list our names, addresses, and
other information in the WHOIS database and why are we forced to submit to
ICANN's UDRP?



November 17, 2005

Flushing the 'Net Down the Tubes

Flushing the 'Net Down the Tubes:


Doc Searls has written a brilliant piece framing the battle for the 'Net at Linux Journal. The piece is long, but if you take the time to read just one essay on the 'Net and the politics surround it this year, read this one. If you're involved in public policy, it's especially important that you take the time to understand what's at stake here. One of Doc's main points: we haven't framed the conversation correctly and our poor choice of words makes the argument seem overly technical and arcane when it's really about freedom, markets, and innovation.

WSIS Deal: Oversight

WSIS Deal: Oversight:


The UN Secretary-General has been invited to "convene a new forum for multi-stakeholder policy dialogue." Everyone can see his/her hearts' desires in the WSIS deal: ICANN can believe that it has survived for another day; governments can believe that they will have "an equal role and responsibility for international Internet governance"; and there will be an enormous meeting in Greece by the second quarter of 2006 to start the Internet Governance Forum going.

November 16, 2005

The WSIS Deal

The WSIS Deal:


There is considerable coverage this morning (or this evening in Tunis) on the last minute WSIS deal struck yesterday. The gist of the coverage rightly reports that the U.S. emerged with the compromise they were looking for as the delegates agreed to retain ICANN and the ultimate U.S. control that comes with it (note that there is a lot in the WSIS statement that may ultimately prove important but that is outside the Internet governance issue including the attention paid to cybercrime, spam, data protection, and e-commerce). This outcome begs the questions -- what happened? And, given the obvious global split leading up to Tunis, what changed to facilitate this deal?

November 09, 2005

US court rules for 'gripe website' owner | The Register

US court rules for 'gripe website' owner | The Register:


A US court has ruled that a disgruntled customer of an insurance firm cannot be sued for defamation over statements he made on his “gripe site” because those statements are protected free speech.
The case dates back to May 2000, when Ronald DiGiovanni obtained a service warranty – provided by Pennsylvania insurance company Penn Warranty Corp – for his 1994 GMC Sonoma truck.

The truck broke down, but Penn Warranty denied DiGiovanni's warranty claim. Consequently, he brought a small claims action against the firm, alleging breach of contract. The dispute eventually settled with a payout of $2,500.
But DiGiovanni was still unhappy. He set up a 45-page website – PennWarrantyLitigation.com – complaining about the firm. The site was available online for a few weeks in January 2004 but is no longer operating.

The U.N.'s Threat to the Net

The U.N.'s Threat to the Net:


United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, writing in The Washington Post, declared that it is a "mistaken notion" that the U.N. "wants to 'take over,' police or otherwise control the Internet." Unfortunately, neither the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), the WSIS' Working Group on Internet Governance (WGIG) or the Secretary General's column give comfort to those committed to cyber-freedom.

November 05, 2005

Unsecured Wi-Fi would be outlawed by N.Y. county | CNET News.com

Unsecured Wi-Fi would be outlawed by N.Y. county | CNET News.com:


According to a new proposal being considered by a suburb of New York City, any business or home office with an open wireless connection but no separate server to fend off Internet attacks would be violating the law.

Politicians in Westchester County are urging adoption of the law--which appears to be the first such legislation in the U.S.--because without it, "somebody parked in the street or sitting in a neighboring building could hack into the network and steal your most confidential data," County Executive Andy Spano said in a statement.

The draft proposal offered this week would compel all "commercial businesses" with an open wireless access point to have a "network gateway server" outfitted with a software or hardware firewall. Such a firewall, used to block intrusions from outside the local network, would be required even for a coffee shop that used an old-fashioned cash register instead of an Internet-linked credit card system that could be vulnerable to intrusions.

November 04, 2005

CDT, CIPPIC File Complaints Against Alleged Spyware Distributors

CDT, CIPPIC File Complaints Against Alleged Spyware Distributors:


The Center for Democracy & Technology (CDT) and the Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC) today asked the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Canadian Competition Bureau to investigate the business practices of Montreal-based software distributor Integrated Search Technologies and several of its business partners. In complaints filed with the FTC and the Competition Bureau, CDT and CIPPIC allege that Integrated Search Technologies (IST) and its affiliates have engaged in a widespread campaign of installing unwanted software on users computers, and have done so using unfair and deceptive practices prohibited by federal law. The complaints come as part of CDT's ongoing effort to root out the most egregious distributors of spyware, adware and other unwanted technologies.

Tech firms back Bush Net effort | CNET News.com

Tech firms back Bush Net effort | CNET News.com:


WASHINGTON--Less than two weeks before a United Nations summit on the Internet begins, technology firms including Google, IBM and Microsoft are supporting the Bush administration's efforts to maintain the United States' unique influence over domain names.

In what amounted to a public effort to back the status quo, those firms sent representatives to an event here organized to highlight what some participants touted as the security and stability of the current form of Internet governance. MCI, BellSouth and Cisco Systems also participated.

Because it's home to 200 million Internet users and nearly half of the world's electronic commerce, the United States is in a unique position to ensure there's not a slowdown in Net growth, Michael D. Gallagher, the U.S. Commerce Department's assistant secretary for communications and information, said at the event. The gathering was organized by the Information Technology Association of America.

"The U.S. does not support top-down intergovernmental control of the Internet," Gallagher said at a panel discussion composed of technology industry and government representatives. "We do not believe in adding an inter-governmental layer of bureaucracy over such a dynamic medium as the Internet."

October 31, 2005

DeLay Associates Asked to Hand Over E-Mails as Part of Probe

DeLay Associates Asked to Hand Over E-Mails as Part of Probe:


Three indicted associates of Republican U.S. Rep. Tom DeLay are being asked to hand over to a Texas prosecutor all their e-mails from 2002 in an investigation into an alleged campaign finance scheme. The latest subpoenas issued by District Attorney Ronnie Earle request correspondence to and from e-mail addresses belonging to John Colyandro, Jim Ellis and Warren RoBold. The DA did not ask DeLay to provide e-mails.

Sex.com domain hijacker captured | CNET News.com

Sex.com domain hijacker captured | CNET News.com:
Sex.com hijacker Stephen M. Cohen was taken into custody Thursday by U.S. enforcement officials, ending four years spent on the lam after a court ordered him to pay $65 million in restitution.

Cohen's arrest adds a new chapter to a bizarre, high-profile case borne out of the dot-com bubble. In late 2000, a U.S. District Court ordered Cohen to return control of the Sex.com domain, which he had been using to operate a pornography site, to its original owner, Gary Kremen. Then in 2001, the court ordered Cohen to pay Kremen a $65 million judgment.

Cohen, a fugitive residing in Tijuana, was detained by Mexican authorities when he tried to renew his work permit to operate another Internet pornography site. Mexican authorities, aware that Cohen faced an outstanding arrest warrant in the U.S., turned him over to the U.S. Marshals Service and U.S. Border Patrol, said Tania Tyler, a deputy marshal and spokesperson for the Marshals Service.

Net firms reach deal to avoid new blackout | CNET News.com

Net firms reach deal to avoid new blackout | CNET News.com: "A dispute between major Internet backbone companies that wound up blacking out portions of the Net for thousands of people earlier this month has been settled for now, preventing new blackouts next month. Network companies Cogent Communications and Level 3 Communications said Friday that they made a new agreement to exchange traffic between their customers. Previously, they had said a temporary agreement would expire on Nov. 9, which could have led to more Net problems. Both sides said they were satisfied with the new agreement, which includes a provision that customers must be notified before any future interruption in service. 'I think that what ultimately caused this resolution was that there were customers putting pressure on the party that initiated that' interruption, said Cogent Chief Executive Officer Dave Schaeffer. 'Hopefully others will think long and hard before doing anything like this again.'"

(Via CNet.)

October 27, 2005

Supreme Court won't hear RIM suit | CNET News.com

Supreme Court won't hear RIM suit | CNET News.com: "update The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday declined to consider an emergency appeal by Research In Motion to review a long-running patent suit that could shut down RIM's BlackBerry service in the United States. U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts, who handles last-minute appeals, did not comment on the rejection of RIM's emergency application. The company asked the high court on Monday to halt a decision by a lower court that could enforce a 2-year-old injunction. Despite the potential threat of having to shutter its service, RIM could avoid a U.S. shutdown if it ultimately wins the case or decides to license the patent from NTP. Jim Balsillie, RIM's co-chief executive officer, has also noted that RIM has a backup plan or software 'workaround' for BlackBerry devices and their respective servers should the company fail to convince the courts of its case. Therefore, BlackBerry customers are unlikely to have their service disrupted. As things now stand, RIM could re-appeal its case to another member of the Supreme Court, although a different ruling is considered a legal long shot by analysts. Roberts' decision mirrors a similar rejection by a U.S. District Court last week."

October 25, 2005

ICANN and VeriSign Announce End to Long-Standing Dispute

ICANN and VeriSign Announce End to Long-Standing Dispute: "ICANN today announced that it has reached an proposed agreement to end all pending litigation over its long-standing dispute with VeriSign. The proposed agreement documents are being posted for public comment and are subject to final approval of the ICANN Board."

(Via CircleID: All Posts.)

October 24, 2005

VeriSign and ICANN Settle Lawsuit

VeriSign and ICANN Settle Lawsuit: "ICANN has announced today that it has tentatively agreed to settle a longstanding dispute with VeriSign Inc. The dispute which began in part from SiteFinder, a controversial search service VeriSign created in late 2003 for users who mistype Web addresses. The following is an excerpt from today's press release..."

(Via CircleID: All Posts.)

UltraDNS Announces a Major Advancement in Internet Security

UltraDNS Announces a Major Advancement in Internet Security: "UltraDNS has announced the deployment of the DNS Shield™, an extension of the UltraDNS infrastructure that provides new levels of performance and security to the Internet. UltraDNS has partnered with leading Internet service and network providers to include America Online, Yahoo! Inc., Verio, a wholly owned subsidiary of NTT Communications, and Earthlink to ensure that the millions of domains powered by UltraDNS are always available to their customers."

(Via CircleID: All Posts.)

October 23, 2005

So What Will Become of "Scraping?"

MercuryNews.com | 10/21/2005 | Craigslist targets Oodle for `scraping' its listings: "Craigslist, long considered a paragon of community-friendly, almost anti-corporate business philosophy, has asked San Mateo Web company Oodle to quit picking up its listings. Oodle's technology pulls excerpts from craigslist and posts them on its own site, including a link so that a user can click on it. The user then gets forwarded to craigslist's full listing. The practice is known as ``scraping,'' as if Oodle were scraping listings from craigslist and piling them onto Oodle -- although Oodle objects to use of the term to describe what it does. The move signals a change of heart by craigslist, the popular San Francisco online classifieds company, which until now has tolerated similar practices by other sites. It is significant because it is the latest skirmish between content producers such as craigslist and those that would like to index the content for their own use -- and profit. The outcome will be far-reaching because the issue touches on just about everything on the Internet, from music, movies, books, classifieds and news."

(Via .)

October 22, 2005

Forgotten Principles of Internet Governance

Forgotten Principles of Internet Governance: "

Suddenly internet governance has become a hot topic.

Words and phrases fly back and forth but minds rarely meet. We do not have discussion, we have chaos.

We are not moving forwards towards a resolution.

Its time to step back and review some basic principles.

1. Principle: The internet is here to serve the needs of people (and organizations of people); people are not here to serve the internet.

Corollary: If internet technology does not meet the needs of users and organizations than it is technology that should be the first to flex and change.

Of course there are times when human practices deserve to change, but that change ought to be driven by human needs rather than being coerced in order to preserve a mutable, but ossified, technology.

For example, consider the arguments over competing DNS roots. There are those who say that there must be one catholic root and name space. There those who advocate overlapping name spaces that are consistent within each top level domain but in which there may be greater or fewer top level domain choices provided by different roots. This argument is driven in part by concerns that flexibility in name spaces will cause failures of a technical nature. The argument is also driven in part by social concerns over the potential ability of people to communicate with one another should there be flexible (and thus to a larger or lesser degree different) name spaces. That latter, social, argument is where the debate should occur; we should all accept the premise that if we want flexibility that the technology of DNS should adapt (assuming that DNS is, in fact, fragile and susceptible to failure - which, if true, would raise questions about the adequacy of DNS technology given the fact that anybody, anywhere can, without permission from anyone, set up a DNS root and name space.)

Corollary: People are the atomic unit of governance.

People may form themselves into groups - such as for-profit corporations or churches - but those are merely derivative forms. We should allow people to speak for themselves in the forums in which decisions of internet governance are made and not require that they act through artificial proxies.

The term 'stakeholder' ought to be abandoned because it forgets that at the bottom of things, all organizations and groupings are aggregations of individual people each with his/her own point of view. Such organizations ought to have authority to express an opinion in the forums of internet governance only to the degree that that organization can obtain voice by convincing individual people of the worth of that opinion. The term 'stakeholder' is a mental straitjacket that presupposes and prejudges that some people (by virtue of the organizations with which they are associated) are more equal than other people who lack such associations.

2. Principle: Every person shall be free to use the Internet in any way that is privately beneficial without being publicly detrimental. The burden of demonstrating public detriment shall be on those who wish to prevent the private use. Such a demonstration shall require clear and convincing evidence of public detriment. The public detriment must be of such degree and extent as to justify the suppression of the private activity.

(I have frequently called this 'The First Law of the Internet'.)

Corollary: Innovation may come from users as well as from standards bodies.

The internet is not yet done; innovation should be accepted. Innovation ought to be not merely allowed but it should also be encouraged. There is always a downside risk from innovation, but the mere assertion that there might be, or even is, a risk is not enough by itself to deny the right of innovation to anyone.

3. Principle: The first step towards governance is a clear understanding of what it is that needs to be governed and what the goals of that governance are.

Today there are a lot of people who talk about 'technical coordination' or 'technical management' without understanding what those terms mean, if anything, when taken out of the clouds and reduced to concrete actions.

We should clearly understand, for example, that the role of establishing terms of registration contracts for domain names and setting domain name registry prices is economic regulation, not technical regulation. In fact the whole model of domain name registries and registrars is an economic and business choice, not a technical one. (See, for example, my note on an alternative structure - The .ewe Business Model - or - It's Just .Ewe and Me, .Kid(s))

It is as important to define the goals of governance as it is to define the subject to be governed. Without a clear goal an institution of governance may easily misconstrue its mission.

Corollary: It is appropriate to question an assertion about whether a matter is 'technical coordination' or is really economic or political policymaking traveling in disguise or is an assertion made to avoid handing the reins of innovation over to a new generation.

Internet governance is a high stakes game. There is much to be gained and much to be lost. We are observing today a face-off between the United States and much of the rest of the world gathered in the WSIS/WGIG proceedings. It is obvious to all, but few will say it, that in this confrontation the issues of internet governance are stalking horses for concerns of national power, national prestige, national security, cultural protection, and economic dominance.

4. Principle: Form follows function.

Each institution of internet governance should be designed to fit tightly around one clearly articulated issue. Broadly defined institutions of governance are an invitation to 'mission creep'. Tightly defined institutions are more easily monitored and they will cause less damage should they wobble off course.

[For a deeper view see my 2004 presentation Governing the Internet, A Functional Approach. Also see my 2002 note A Plan To Reform ICANN: A Functional Approach. Similar suggestions have been put forth my several other observers.]

The question of governance and how the powers of governance should be shaped and limited have been considered by many brilliant minds. Might it be useful to re-open the books of the history of these 18th century thinkers and refresh our understanding of how institutions of governance ought to be shaped so that their internal tensions and procedures lead to stable and limited behavior?

Corollary: Sometimes a job of internet governance is already the responsibility of an existing entity or set of entities.

There is a tendency on the part of some to consider that anything associated with the internet is new and unique. In some few cases that may be true, but for the most part the internet simply adds a new shade to an existing portrait.

Take for example the so-called 'Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy', the UDRP. This has become a de facto law of internet domain names. The UDRP is often the first, and too often the last, stop in a dispute over a domain name. Yet this UDRP was formulated and imposed by a body that has no authority to enact legislation for any one, much less all, nations. It is often forgotten that there do exist many bodies in which the authority for enacting such laws has been vested: the national legislatures of the individual nations. In many regards the imposition of the UDRP was an act in which the authority of existing nations was to a degree overthrown and replaced. The imposition of the UDRP was not so much an act of governance as it was an act of revolution.

"

(Via CaveBear Blog.)

October 21, 2005

What is the Internet FOR Anyway?

An issue has been brewing almost since the inception of Google AdWords, regarding who "owns" what rights to which words. Trademark holders and business owners alike have been calling "foul" when a competitor uses their name, product name, or trademarked slogan in order to cause their advertisements to appear either in the Google search results (by use of meta tags or otherwise using the keywords in their website itself), or by purchasing those words via Google's AdWords which would then cause their ads to appear in the sponsored sections of the search pages.

In this particular case, Office Depot has sued Staples, claiming that Staples linked to words that are Office Depot trademarks, causing Staples ads to come up on searches for "Viking," which is a subsidiary of Office Depot. Office Depot claims trademark infringement, false advertising, unfair competition, and deceptive trade practices.

So what's going on here? Does a trademark mean that you then "own" that word or that phrase, and nobody else can use it ever? Can the "trademark police" stop you from using the words "Office Depot" unless you're talking about them specifically, including disallowing anyone from saying they are a store "like Office Depot?"

Trademark Infringement

Let's take a look at the claims that Office Depot are making against Staples. First in line is trademark infringement. Trademark law is carved out of our general ability to use words in any way we choose (in the US anyway) in order to protect consumers against inferior products, by clarifying the source of a product or service so that you can be certain that an "Office Depot Product" was actually made by Office Depot and not by someone else. It is relatively clear in this case that a consumer would not be confused in the least by clicking on an advertisement for a shop that does not claim to be Office Depot, or have Office Depot in their domain name. If I were the judge, I'd throw that one out on its nose.

False Advertising

How about false advertising? Well, since Staples isn't claiming to be anything but Staples, how could they be advertising falsely? The advertisement they have created is purportedly true. The only difference is that the mechanism by which the ads are shown. Is this false advertising? Not in my opinion anyway. It could, in fact, be argued that use of competitor's words in search engines are pro-consumer in that it provides the consumer with far more choices then they would otherwise find.

Unfair Competition

Unfair competition? Now that one is a possibility. Unfair competition laws are set to protect companies against other companies, rather than protect the consumer against companies, as trademark law and false advertising are set up to do. Unfair competition actions grew out of trademark infringement law to prevent one trader from diverting patronage from a rival by falsely representing that his goods were the goods of his rival. But wait a minute here; Staples wasn't passing off their goods by saying they were actually Office Depot's goods. Again, there was no likelihood of confusion or misunderstand as to the source of the product. So that one doesn't work terribly well either.

Deceptive Trade Practices

That leaves us with deceptive trade practices. So what ARE deceptive trade practices? The Federal Trade Commission defines prohibited activities in the Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act as:

1) Passing off goods or services as those of another. Well, that looks a lot like unfair competition and trademark infringement.

2) Causes likelihood of confusion or misunderstanding as to the source or approval of goods or services; or an affiliation with or certification by someone else. Does a listing on a search engine imply an approval, affiliation or certification? Not to any consumer who has used a search engine for more than 15 minutes :-). Doesn't seem like this one fits either.

3) Uses deceptive representations or designations of the geographic source of the goods or service. Nope, don't see any of that here.

4) Represents that goods or services have sponsorship, approval, characteristics, ingredients, uses or benefits that they don't have, or that a person has some sponsorship, approval or connections that he or she does not. Office Depot hasn't claimed anything about the goods themselves, just that they are being advertised by purchasing words from AdWords that correspond to Office Depot protected words. So that doesn't work either.

5) Represents that the goods are original or new when they are not. See #4.

6) Represents that goods or services are of a particular standard, quality or grade, or of a particular style or model, when they are not. See #5

7) Disparages the goods, services or business of someone else by false or misleading representations. If you believe that simply displaying someone else's goods disparage yours, perhaps this one will fly, but likely not.

So what is the real point here?

So if such a cursory view by another attorney shows the large holes in the claims of this lawsuit, why file it? What is the point?

It is highly possible that Office Depot has filed this suit in order to bring attention to the practice of competitors ensuring that their advertisements are shown along with their competitors' in hopes that Congress takes up the issue and passes new laws or modifies current laws to prohibit the practice. However, prohibiting the use of competitor's words, products or phrases in meta tags or programs like AdWords would likely create much more difficulty than it solves. As a consumer, one uses a search engine in order to find the best product, the best price, or information on that or similar products to fulfill your current needs. It is in the best interest of the consumer to provide as much information as possible so that the consumer would be able to make the best choice for that particular consumer's circumstances.

The question comes down to a familiar one - should the Internet be primarily an outlet for information, or for commercialization? If you choose information, then anyone should be able to use whatever meta tags, adwords, keywords, or text that they desire, so long as they are not in violation of laws that protect consumers from poor quality, or confusion as to the source of a product or service. This would leave the constitutional right to "bash" particular products, use parody, satire, or simply mention products on your website and then sell AdWords to further promote your blog or whatever else you wish to promote. On the other hand, if you choose commercialization, use of trademarks in meta tags, on your website, or in AdWords would be prohibited, necessarily limiting the amount of easily accessible information on ANY subject, not just regarding products or e-commerce interests.

Oklahoma Man Wins $10 Million Judgment Against a Spammer

Oklahoma Man Wins $10 Million Judgment Against a Spammer: "On Thursday the 22nd, Robert Braver, an Oklahoma ISP owner who is a long time activist against both spam and junk faxes, received a default judgment of over $10 million against high profile spammer Robert Soloway and his company Newport Internet Marketing. Soloway has frequently been cited as one of the ten largest spammers in the world."

(Via CircleID: All Posts.)

UltraDNS Services Help Organizations Impacted by Level 3-Cogent Peering Dispute

UltraDNS Services Help Organizations Impacted by Level 3-Cogent Peering Dispute: "By utilizing the UltraDNS Directory Service Platform, companies who maintain data centers with either Cogent or Level 3 were able to avoid the 'black holes' in cyberspace created by this dispute and route Level 3 or Cogent subscribers to alternative websites or mail servers seamlessly. As reported by multiple news outlets last week, Level 3 Communications shut down the equipment supporting a private peering relationship with Cogent Communications on Wednesday, October 5th."

(Via CircleID: All Posts.)

October 20, 2005

Furor Grows Over Internet Bugging

Furor Grows Over Internet Bugging: "A new government order will force some internet telephony services to establish a central monitoring capability to help the FBI. But where does that leave peer-to-peer phone companies? By Ryan Singel."

(Via Wired News.)

October 19, 2005

Court Stops Web Site From 'Legal' Claim

Court Stops Web Site From 'Legal' Claim: "WASHINGTON-A federal court has temporarily banned a Los Angeles-based Web site from claiming that its service lets users legally share copyrighted files, the government said Wednesday."

(Via FindLaw: Top Legal Headlines.)

October 18, 2005

FBI puts stop to spam king - 10/16/05

FBI puts stop to spam king - 10/16/05: "FBI puts stop to spam king

Agents close up shop by seizing equipment from bulk e-mailer's W. Bloomfield home in recent raid.

By Joel Kurth and David Shepardson / The Detroit News

Expensive spam

Unwanted commercial e-mail isn't only annoying; it's become a drain on businesses, according to several studies. A February report by the University of Maryland claims it costs the national economy $22 billion a year in lost productivity. Earlier studies pegged it at $9 billion. Either way, about 40 percent of all e-mail is unwanted, according to Brightmail Inc., an anti-spam software maker.

Michigan's unapologetic king of bulk e-mail is in trouble again. This time, an FBI raid has closed what some consider one of the world's largest houses of spam.

Warrants unsealed last week revealed that agents in September seized computers, laptops, financial records and disks from the 8,000-square-foot home of Alan M. Ralsky. The $750,000 West Bloomfield mini-mansion was built off profits from the 100 million electronic offers for everything from Botox to mortgages that Ralsky sends every day.

FBI agents even took a copy of a 2002 Detroit News story that called Ralsky the 'poster boy for spam.'

'We're out of business at this point in time,' Ralsky said last week. 'They didn't shut us down. They took all our equipment, which had the effect of shutting us down.'

The raid is the latest episode in a cat-and-mouse game between anti-spammers and Ralsky, 60, a gregarious, heavy-smoking ex-convict considered Public Enemy No. 1 in some pockets of the Internet."

October 16, 2005

Google, Microsoft await final stay order in California | InfoWorld | News | 2005-10-14 | By Elizabeth Montalbano, IDG News Service

Google, Microsoft await final stay order in California | InfoWorld | News | 2005-10-14 | By Elizabeth Montalbano, IDG News Service: "A judge in San Jose, California, heard arguments in Google (Profile, Products, Articles) Inc.'s suit against Microsoft (Profile, Products, Articles) Corp. Friday, but did not make a final decision as to whether a tentative ruling made the previous day in the case would stick, according to lawyers from both companies.

Thursday, Judge Ronald Whyte issued a tentative ruling in a U.S. District Court in San Jose to grant Microsoft's motion to stay, or put on hold, Google's case in California. The suit was filed in response to an earlier suit by Microsoft against Google and a former Microsoft employee, Kai-Fu Lee, over charges that Lee violated a noncompetition clause between him and Microsoft when he took a position at Google.

Google originally filed the California case in a state court but it was moved to a federal court July 29 at Microsoft's request."

(Via InfoWorld.)

October 14, 2005

Nigeria to send spammers in jail for three years

Nigeria to send spammers in jail for three years: "Nigeria, which has global notoriety as a base for criminals exploiting the reach of the Internet, is considering making spamming a criminal offense that could land senders of unsolicited e-mails in jail for three years. 'Any person spamming electronic messages to recipients with whom he has no previous relationship commits an offense,' said the text of the draft law presented to the legislature this week"

(Via Pravda.RU: World.)

October 13, 2005

Microsoft, Google to resume battle for employee

Microsoft, Google to resume battle for employee: "The tech giants will return to the courtroom Friday to continue their dispute over Google's employment of Kai-Fu Lee, a former Microsoft worker. "

(Via CNET News.com.)