An Interactive Guide for The Perplexed To Domain Names
ICANN – ACPA – First Amendment – State Laws-New
Gtlds
© 2001 Green & Green All Rights Reserved
Introduction
Since
the first article about the frustration of trademark owners several
breakthroughs and trends have manifested in the cases on the ACPA and
ICANN processes, several new theories have been tested and the First
Amendment has played a major role. Recall
that these processes are bent on resolution of the issues that can arise
when a URL or domain name registrant runs into an accusation of
“Cybersquatting” on another’s trademark rights.
The trends also serve to cause pause to one who thinks that they
have the rights. Domain Name
owners also have rights to use a Domain Name that suits their legitimate
needs, so that the law is attempting to strike a balance, especially for
“generic” Domain Names such as “bread.com” where the word bread
could not become a trademark in the traditional legal sense.
If
I have left out anything that the reader considers important, please email
the author. This article was
prepared in July, 2001 and changes in this area of law are constant and
complex. FOR HELP on the VOCABULARY please use the High
Tech Dictionary.
The 2001 and beyond trends that are developing in this arena are not
only unpredictable but massive, inconsistent, formative and broad, and
include:
ü
First
Amendment rights to say a company “sucks”
ü
Rights
in Domain Name registrants to the URLs,
ü
Famous
persons name Rights of Publicity,
ü
What is a
Domain Name?
ü
New
California
State
laws protecting celebrity names.
ü
A major procedural point in the
Domain Name field comes in the very careful selection
of the Forum.
ü
A trend during 2001 is toward
placing a greater burden on the Plaintiff to prove
his case against a URL and not to rely merely on perceived fame.
ü
The coming of new
Gtlds, “.biz, .pro, .law, .info, .TV,” and others add yet another
dimension to the legal admixture.
From 2000, some issues that seem to remain fairly predictable are:
ü
The
Registrar non-Liability issue: NSI and most other registrars are
usually not liable for Domain Name Cybersquatting.
ü
ISPs are generally “out” of
liability if they do not monitor or control what is sent via their
networks.
ü
Trademark law changes remain
fairly minimal and consistent with prior practice.
a.
Defamation
- Preliminary Injunction is Tough to Get:
i.
Bihari and Bihari Interiors,
Inc., V. Gross
2000 WL 1409757 United States District Court, S.D.
New York
. No. 00 Civ. 1664(SAS). (
Sept. 25, 2000
) shows how the first Amendment can become
involved over arguments about defamation on the Internet.
In Bihari the owner service mark "Bihari Interiors," for
interior design brought an action for defamation and the infringement of
the mark by the owner of a website critical of the Bihari’s services for
the defendant.
ii.
Blatantly Negative Statements:
The site at "bihariinteriors.com" and "bihari.com" was
extremely critical of the Biharis. Gross
had other “generic name” sites such as
“manhattaninteriordesign.com” that contained Metatags that used
“bihari” service marks. The Defendants had filed a state court suit
against the Biharis for breach of an interior design contract an
apparently really hated the job done for their dwelling.
1.
The defamation was blatant, such
as “this horrible interior decorator…” and, “the first web site
designed to protect people from the alleged ill intentions of Marianne
Bihari & Bihari Interiors “ and on and on like this
iii.
First Amendment:
There is an old maxim in constitutional law about defamatory speech and
the First Amendment. Though
defamation is a tort, it is also protected speech.
The Court in Bihari reminded us, “There is a heavy
presumption against validity of any preliminary injunction barring
allegedly defamatory speech.” [Bihari
at N 11.].
The Biharis had to demonstrate: “the (1) likelihood of
irreparable harm should the injunction be denied; and (2) either (a)
likelihood of ultimate success on the ACPA claim, or (b) sufficiently
serious questions going to the merits and a balance of hardships tipping
decidedly toward the party seeking relief.”
That is the trouble with old maxims; they may not make sense under
new tests. A court of equity will not, except in special circumstances,
issue an injunctive order restraining libel or slander or otherwise
restricting free speech.
iv.
Trademark Rights:
The Biharis alleged their trademark was being used to lure visitors
away from their own web site and expensive advertising.
However, Generally, personal names used as trademarks are regarded
as descriptive terms, protected only if they have acquired distinctive and
secondary meaning.
v.
Biharis also alleged "initial
interest confusion" might cause them damages, based on the idea that
potential customers of one website will be diverted and distracted to a
competing website. The harm is that the potential customer believes that
the competing website is associated with the website the customer was
originally searching for and will not resume searching for the original
website. This did not work
either because the Court stated “Inserting "Bihari Interiors"
in the metatags is not akin to a misleading "billboard," which
diverts drivers to a competing store…” and there was no proof of
diversion.
vi.
“Fair
Use:” the central considerations of fair use in trademark[2]
are whether the Defendant has used the mark (1) in its descriptive sense,
and (2) in good faith, and Gross won on this also. “Fair use is
established when the challenged term is a use, otherwise than as a mark,
... of a term or device which is descriptive of and used fairly and in
good faith only to describe the goods or services of such party...,”
citing 15 U.S.C. § 1115(b)(4). Good
faith was proven by Gross’s published disclaimer that the views
expressed were opinion. RESULT: no preliminary injunction and no summary
judgment. The case is pending.
b.
Web
Sites That Suck. If
your company finds a website that has the URL “yourcompanysucks.com”
you might be concerned that it might impair your company’s reputation.
Hopefully that impairment is not earned by poor services or goods.
For, depending on jurisdiction of the dispute, Your Company, Inc.
might have to live with it. The
difference can be in the law of the forum.
It might include the
U.S.A.
with litigation under anti dilution,
trademark and ACPA
statutes that one can use to seek to enjoin the SUCKS sites.
Trends tend to show that unless there is an unsavory aspect to it,
under
U.S.
law the First Amendment could permit such uses.
i.
In
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Walsucks and Walmarket Puerto Rico, Case
No. D2000-0477, (July 20, 2000),
Walmart sought to stop Walsucks and Walmarket Puerto Rico, with addresses
in Canada from defaming its business using,
"WALMARTCANADASUCKS.COM", "WAL-MARTCANADASUCKS.COM",
“WALMARTUKSUCKS.COM" and "WALMARTPUERTORICOSUCKS.COM".
ii.
Registered
trademark makes a difference: Walmart registered its marks WAL-MART in
the
United States
and
Canada
and the mark was known in
Canada
as early as 1965.
iii.
Famous Mark:
Wal-Mart stated its WAL-MART mark is famous. The WAL-MART mark is
famous in part, because the mark has been in continuous use since at least
1962
iv.
The sites were very defamatory of
Wal-Mart: The "walmartcanadasucks.com" and
"walmartuksucks.com" web pages each state that "This is a
freedom of information site set up for dissatisfied Walmart Canada [or UK,
respectively] customers." Each site invites visitors to "Spill
Your Guts" with a "horror story relating to your dealings with
Wal-Mart
Canada
[or
UK
, respectively]".
v.
Confusing Similarity:
Allegations that “The domain names at issue are likely to confuse
customers and cause them to believe mistakenly that these domain names are
associated with Wal-Mart stores…”
vi.
Bad Faith Element:
As evidence of bad faith, W-M alleged that, the Defendant registered five
‘Wal-Mart’ domain names within days of receiving notice of the
Administrative Panel’s decision in the case of Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
v. Walmarket Canada, Case No. D2000-0150. The timing of these
registrations alone is evidence of bad faith.”
vii.
No First Amendment:
Wal-Mart also used an argument
that might not work under the First Amendment, going to the content
of the Defendant sites as well as alleging unfair competition “to harass
Complainant and interfere with Complainant’s business as shown by the
fact that they deliberately selected domain names that disparage
Complainant.” [emphasis
supplied]
1.
Of course the respondent stated
the sites were freedom of expression opinion web sites.
Wal-Mart countered with the argument that might not work under the
First Amendment: “Complainant respectfully disputes Respondents’
suggestion that because the attached websites are ‘freedom of
expression’ forums, the domain names at issue are immune to challenge.
First, a domain name may be registered and used in bad faith even when the
attached website is used to express opinion. See DFO, Inc. v.
Williams, Case No. D2000-0181. Second, under both
U.S.
and Canadian law, speech is not entitled to
absolute protection under all circumstances. Speech is only protected
against governmental interference. Where the speech does not involve an
activity or institution controlled by the government, there may not be any
special protection.”
a.
Cyber griping:
For his part, the Respondent alleged
that registering a
domain name in the form of “*.sucks.com” provides a forum for
critical commentary, is not uncommon, and is "cybergriping” and
therefore he was not liable under the First Amendment. The Respondent
stated that “Respondent has rights and legitimate interests in respect
to the domain names.
viii.
The Panel applied the 3 UDRP
principals: (i) Respondent’s domain name is identical or confusingly
similar to a trademark or service mark in which the complainant has
rights; (ii) Respondent has no
rights or legitimate interests in respect of the domain name; and (iii)
Respondent’s domain name has been registered and is being used in bad
faith.
ix.
The panel applied
U.S.
law and the famous factors from the Ninth
Circuit in AMF Inc. v. Sleekcraft
Boats, 599 F.2d 341 (9th Cir. 1979). The Sleekcraft
factors are directed to whether there is a "likelihood of
confusion": (1) strength
of the mark; (2) proximity of the goods; (3) similarity of the marks; (4)
evidence of actual confusion; (5) marketing channels used; (6) type of
goods and the degree of care likely to be exercised by the purchaser; (7)
defendant's intent in selecting the mark; and (8) likelihood of expansion
of the product lines.
x.
Conclusion: Transfer Domain
Names:
1.
The “sucks” misspelled Domain
Names were determined to be confusingly similar to Complainant’s mark.
Respondent acted for commercial gain, i.e., to extract consulting fees
from Complainant by threatening to disrupt its business.
2.
The activity constitutes bad faith
within the meaning of paragraph 4(b)(iv) of the Policy.
All the names were transferred to Wal-Mart.
xi.
First Amendment disclaimer from
UDRP Panel: This is very interesting
from an international forum: “The Panel stresses that this decision does
not address legitimate freedom of expression sites established by parties
critical of trademark holders…. [and the panel] anticipates that
others… may choose to characterize this decision as seeking to stifle
freedom of expression on the Internet by ordering the transfer of
"sucks" formative names. Certain trademark holders might choose
to characterize this decision as supporting action against
"-sucks" formative domain names in other contexts. The Panel
intends this decision to serve neither of these aims. This decision is
directed to a blatant case of abuse of the domain name registration
process -- no more, no less.”
a.
Springsteen
- No Trademark Registration:
Bruce Springsteen did not fare well at the ICANN hearing in Bruce
Springsteen -v- Jeff Burgar and Bruce Springsteen Club Case No.
D2000-1532. If the trademark
is so famous as to carry with it the image or sound of the performer, in
the entertainment industry it may be said to have gained secondary
meaning. Bruce asserted inter
alia that the use of the name creates a misleading impression of
association which is not based in fact.
The fact that the Defendant owned some 1,500 URLs was asserted as
evidence of “Bad Faith.” Springsteen never registered his name as a
trademark, however and this was a factor in the case. He failed to
produce enough evidence of use
for the panel, however and relied on fame. The panelists included Gordon
D. Harris and Michael Froomkin, who had been known for his criticism of
the often one-sided holdings against Domain Name registrants of famous
persons names.
i.
Respondent pointed out that (1)
Springsteen's representatives have given no evidence of any common law
rights, (2) the rock star’s name had already been registered in a domain
name, namely "brucespringsteen.net" in 1998 and alleged that his
use does not besmirch or denigrate the name of Bruce Springsteen but to
have hits on his celebrity club site www.celebrity1000.com.
ii.
Bad Faith – Based on
Available Domain Names Left:
As to the Bad faith issue, Respondent stated that “… there has
been no evidence submitted that he intended to stop Bruce
Springsteen from registering the domain name
"brucespringsteen.com" himself. The domain name
"brucespringsteen.net" had been registered by Mr. Springsteen's
record company for some years and that, presumably, that should have
sufficed.”
iii.
The WIPO Arbitration and Mediation
Center Panel composed found that the 3-part test lacked part 2 and found
the Respondent has rights or legitimate interests in respect of the domain
name, based on his registration of the Domain Name under the fictitious
name, “Bruce Springsteen Club” and links to the Respondent’s
"celebrity1000.com" advertising site.
iv.
They admitted that celebrity names
can acquire a secondary meaning giving rise to rights equating to
unregistered trade marks, “notwithstanding the non-registrability of the
name itself. It should be noted that no evidence has been given of the
name "Bruce Springsteen" having acquired a secondary meaning.
v.
Panel’s Strict Interpretation
of UDRP:
The UDRP required in paragraph 4(b)(ii) that a cybersquatting
Domain Name registration, to be “bad faith” (among other factors)
should have the effect of preventing the owner of a trade mark or service
mark from reflecting the mark "in a corresponding
domain name". This part
of the decision has subsequently been criticized.
It appears too technically demanding at first glance but does serve
to demonstrate that arbitration can be subject to the personal whims or
viewpoints of the panelists, as is the general nature of arbitration.
vi.
ADR Used Precedent:
They interestingly cited “precedent” and rejected it, “Further, in
the Julia Roberts case, there is a suggestion that the registration of the
domain name <juliaroberts.com> "necessarily prevented the
Complainant from using the
disputed domain name". As indicated above, that is not sufficient
to meet the criteria required under the UDRP for the relevant
circumstance in paragraph 4(b).”
1.
NOTE:
It is unusual for arbitrators to cite precedent or use stare Decisis
type of reasoning. It is
likely that cross citation will continue for this is all on the cutting
edge of the law and without precedent arbitrators might find themselves
flailing in the dark.
b.
Criticism for the
Springsteen Decision.
i.
Performers Have Rights to Names:
In the Celine Dion case, Celine Dion and Sony Music
Entertainment (
Canada
) Inc. v. Jeff Burgar operating or carrying
on business as Celine Dion Club, Case No. D2000-1838,
the panelist William R. Cornish stated, “It has been accepted in …UDRP
decisions that authors and performers may have trademark rights in the
names by which they have become well-known.”
1.
He went on, “The majority of the
Panel in Case D2000-1532, Springsteen v. Burgar has cast doubt on this
view, but their dictum is in no way necessary to their Decision and I have
not accepted it in deciding Case D2000-1628, Julie Brown v. Julie Brown
Club.”
2.
The arbitrator suggested the
ruling was wrong because a famous personality can establish common law
rights to their name, even if it is not a registered trademark,
“…Authors and performers can establish trade mark rights either by
showing that they have registered their names as marks for certain goods
or services, or because, through deployment of the names as source
indicators in commerce, they have unregistered or "common law"
rights to protection against misleading use.”
3.
Interestingly this panel asserted
a well known fact as legal theory that, “it is particularly likely that
an address which is the proper spelling of an artist's name in the .com
gTLD will be treated by some as pointing to an official site.”
c.
Rights of Publicity
should be able to assert claims akin to California Civil Code’s Sec.
3344 worldwide against cybersquatters who use those names commercially
without authorization. The law
will evolve rapidly but at the turn of the new millennium in e-business,
I-business and global communication, the world is not yet in its honeymoon
on the long marriage of e-commerce the law and the needs of entertainers
and famous personalities.
d.
Madonna Ciccone,
p/k/a Madonna v. Dan Parisi and "Madonna.com"Case No.
D2000-0847. This case points
out that even a celebrity must pro actively register her trademark to
prevail in the world of Domain Name disputes.
i.
Madonna is the owner of
U.S.
Trademark Registrations
for the mark MADONNA for entertainment services and related goods (Reg.
No. 1,473,554 and 1,463,601). She has used and is still using her name and
mark MADONNA professionally for entertainment services since 1979.
Note that this is a major difference from the Springsteen case
where Bruce did not have the registrations in place.
1.
Other big differences from Bruce
are that Madonna’s Respondent registered MADONNA as a trademark in
Tunisia
,
and that the Respondent operated his sit as an "adult entertainment
site that featured sexually explicit photographs.”
He was thoughtfully however to insert a notice stating,
"Madonna.com is not affiliated.” Despite the disclaimer, the
respondent was held to have in bad faith used Madonna’s famous name.
Of course, this was a different WIPO panel.
2.
They found, “Although the word
"Madonna" has an ordinary dictionary meaning not associated with
Complainant”
a.
Nothing in the record supports a
conclusion that Respondent adopted and used the term "Madonna"
in good faith based on its ordinary dictionary meaning.
b.
The name was selected and used by
Respondent with the intent to attract for commercial gain Internet users
to Respondent’s web site by trading on the fame of Complainant’s mark.
The panel concluded this intentionally trades on the fame of
another can not constitute a "bona fide" offering of goods or
services.
e.
California
Personalities Get a Boost Business & Professions Code Section17525
Under the
California
’s Anti Cyber Piracy
Act, personalities are generally more protected than they seem to be under
ICANN arbitration and the law is again consistent with the federal
equivalent.
i.
California
’s new anti piracy
act helps living and deceased personalities. In part to remedy the
shortfalls of inconsistencies in cases like Bruce Springsteen, In August
2000 the
California
legislature provided
much clearer protection to personalities, the glut of which
California
is famous for.
ii.
This is termed “UNFAIR BUSINESS
PRACTICES--CYBER PIRACY” and almost mirrors the federal ACPA.
The new law states, “(a) It is unlawful for a person, with a bad
faith intent to register, traffic in, or use a domain name, that is
identical or confusingly similar to the personal name of another living
person or deceased personality, without regard to the goods or services of
the parties.” This is
consistent with other Business & Professions code sections on the
subject of dilution and trademark protection.
It is in the Business & Professions Code because it deals with
unfair competition among businesses and provides broader coverage than the
Federal laws on the subject prior to 1997 when anti-dilution and trademark
law were amended to broaden their scope.
See 15 U.S.C. 1125(c).
iii.
Does Not Apply to Copyrights.
As in the ACPA there is an
escape hatch: “(b) This section shall not apply if the name registered
as a domain name is connected to a work of authorship, including, but not
limited to, fictional or nonfictional entertainment, and dramatic,
literary, audiovisual, or musical works.”
a.
Quiz:
What is it that: is really an address, may become a Trademark, may
incorporate a trademark, it might be “intellectual property,” some may
long enough to copyright, it seems to be a contractual right to a service
and may not be garnishable nor may it be converted?
Answer: A Domain Name.
b.
Lest we forget, a Domain Name is
actually an alphabetical assigned term that, when typed into an internet
browser, will open files on a server that is actually at the address, a
number such as: 123.456.789.23.
c.
“Just” a Domain Name
Does Not a Trademark Make; and A
Trademark for one Class does Not Cover all Others.
In Brookfield Communications, Inc., vs.
West Coast Entertainment Corporation, U.S.C Ninth Circuit.
(April 22, 1999.) 174 F.3d
1036, 50 U.S.P.Q.2d 1545 another “
Hollywood
” case allowed for the opportunity to clear up
the law, holding that the mere registration of a domain name
“Moviebuff.com” does not provide any trademark priority as against a
prior trademark user. This
case also solidifies that an action for infringement may be based on use
of meta text (invisible use of a text or phrase that cannot be seen by
users but search engines can find them). Thus the elements were laid bare
to see and Congress saw the confusion in the cases on one hand and that it
was time for clearer definition in this international legal arena.
d.
ACPA : Capable of being an
In Rem “Property”
15 U.S.C. Section 1125 (d) (2) (A) provides that “the owner of a mark
may file an in Rem civil action against a 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…”
e.
What
Rights does a Domain Name Registrant Have?
i.
Under various Registration
Agreements there are common elements.
ii.
The registrar is providing the
service of connecting an alphanumeric word or phrase to a certain DNS
address. DNS addresses are
harder for the public to remember and is meaningless.
The service maintains that connection for the duration of the
Agreement.
iii.
When it expires, and the Domain
Name registrant does not renew, the name may 1) be warehoused by NSI
2) become available for purchase by others or 3) lie dormant until
discovered and then grabbed up.
f.
Rights by agreement are
sometimes sold, transferred and assigned,
licensed and otherwise dealt with.
i.
Intellectual property generally is
often licensed, cross-licensed and distributed, assigned by law, sale and
transferred by operation of law such as the good will that goes with an
assigned trademark. Logically,
since NSI and many other registers allow the transfer of Domain Names
within their register systems they appear to function as other
intellectual property.
1.
The NSI Service Agreement states,
a.
“domain name registrations that
have passed the registration agreement's anniversary date, must be in a
paid status to transfer, delete, modify, or otherwise to request Network
Solutions to affect the domain name record or to provide domain name
services.” And
b.
“you may not transfer your
domain name registration to another domain name registrar during the first
sixty (60) days from the effective date of your initial domain name
registration with us…” and
c.
“you agree that we may suspend,
cancel or transfer your domain name registration services in order to: (i)
correct mistakes made by us or the registry in registering your chosen
domain name, or (ii) to resolve a dispute.”
And
d.
“TRANSFER AND ASSIGNMENT. You
may transfer your domain name registration to a third party of your
choice, subject to the procedures and conditions found at: http://www.
networksolutions.com/en_US/makechanges/rnca/agreement.html…”
g.
Virginia
courts say Domain Name is not garnishable.
In a recent case of Network Solutions Inc vs. Umbro
International Va. S. Court
4/21/00
No 991168, suggests that the URL “is or
permits a service” and thus it is not garnishable under
Virginia
’s garnishment laws as a service rather than
tangible goods or real property. Thus
it is not amenable to an In Rem action under the state garnishment law.
Yet Section 1125 (d) allows courts to order the Domain Name register to
turn over a URL to a trademark owner.
This may remain a conflict for some time.
i.
Note that the current (July, 2001) NSI Service
Agreement states, “Your rights under
this Agreement are not assignable and any attempt by your creditors to
obtain an interest in your rights under this Agreement, whether by
attachment, levy, garnishment or otherwise, renders this Agreement
voidable at our option.”
ii.
It has been suggested that because
of this issue a Domain Name is not “property” of any kind and
therefore not “intellectual property” either.
This seems logical since the Domain Name can only be used if it is
registered with one of the ICANN certified registrars worldwide and linked
to a DNS address.
iii.
Therefore, this line of reasoning
goes, the Domain Name is merely a contractual service provided by the
registrar. The service is what
“connects” a user’s browser to a certain Server because of the
registrar equating the DNS with the Domain Name so the user types in a
familiar Domain Name. It is
the Domain Name that is advertised and touted as the address of a website
that does something, sells goods, applies for credit, researches anything,
even a free Webster’s dictionary. Witness,
“Amazon.com” that has become a trademark for the online store. These
Domain Names then become source indicators.
h.
Generic Domain Names May
Never be Registrable trademarks:
i.
The Patent & Trademark
Office takes the position
that a Domain Name is an address and not a trademark.
ii.
Yet, over time, some non generic
Domain Names may become source indicators, represent good will and thus
take on features of a trademark and thus become intellectual property in
character. Generic Domain
Names that have become popular like “law.com” and “clogs.com” are
not usually capable of being trademarks because they are both generic and
usually descriptive. Yet many
modern well known “brands” have been created such as the successful
“eBay”, “Yahoo”, and others. These
Domain Names then may gain and have their status as mere contractual
services be claimable by the registrant Domain Name owner and become
trademarks that can be enforced under the law of unfair competition.
i.
Domain Name is not Capable
of Being Converted like Property.
i.
In
Kremen v. Cohen, 99 F.Supp.2d 1168 (N.D.Cal.
May 30, 2000
) the Domain Name “sex.com” was fraudulently
stolen and legally retrieved as if it were intellectual property.
The court stated, “The elements of conversion are as follows: (1)
the plaintiff has ownership or right to possession of the property at the
time of the conversion; (2) the defendant's conversion is by a wrongful
act or disposition of property rights; and (3) damages.”
ii.
The Facts included that Kremen
registered the Domain Name with NSI. Later
Cohen signed and submitted a made up agreement to transfer the Domain Name
to him and used the name of a former Kremen employee to accomplish the
transfer.
iii.
Originally the U.S.D.C. Ware, J.,
dismissed NSI from the claims and in NSI’s Motion for Summary Judgment
held that the (1) the registrar did not have contractual commitment
not to assign the name since there was no beneficial consideration
for one (it was registered in 1994 and gratis); (2) registrant was
not a third party beneficiary of contract between the United States and
NSI, that established the registration system; (3) a domain name was not
property capable of being converted under California conversion law
(due the fact that it does not include “intangible property”)
; there was no bailment relationship between and no fiduciary duty owed to
the registrant and the failure to allege any relevant material
misrepresentation by the registrar precluded negligent misrepresentation
claim.
iv.
The Court in dismissing NSI as a
party agreed with the Umbro decision, “…Historically, the tort
of conversion was confined to tangible property. However,
California
law does recognize ‘conversion of intangibles
represented by documents, such as bonds, notes, bills of exchange,
stock certificates, and warehouse receipts.’…. Intangible property
such as "goodwill of business, trade secrets, a newspaper route, or a
laundry list of customers" are not subject to conversion.
The Ninth Circuit noted that …"[a]lthough the common law
rule has been relaxed somewhat, and the tort may now reach the
misappropriation of intangible rights customarily merged in or identified
with some document, it has not yet been extended further."
v.
In Kremen’s suit for fraud and
conversion against Cohen under ACPA, however things went better:
1.
The Court found fraud and that
since 1995 Cohen’s use of sex.com was causing irreparable harm. On
Appeal in Nov, 2000
the Court granted summary judgment and ordered injunctions because of the
likelihood of success on the merits. Here
the Court stated specifically:
2.
It is likely Kremen would obtain a
constructive trust among other claims against Cohen, and Cohen had no
rights to the sex.com domain name,
3.
that Defendant Cohen had
fraudulently transferred his and his company’s assets to prevent money
recovery and
4.
Ordered NSI (pursuant to its
agreement to abide by the Court's authority …) to change the sex.com
domain name registration record specifically.
You would want to include these among your Prayers in a complaint:
all fields in an NSI “Who Is” listing (registrant, administration
contact, etc.) are Gary Kremen, listing his address….” etc.
This clever language gets around the property issue by requiring
changing the data for the Domain Name listing, rather than ordering the
“transfer of” the Domain Name.
5.
The end result of this is that a
Domain Name may serve as a trademark, as a mere contractual right to link
to a server, and it may be transferable and owned as if property but not
garnishable as property. NSI
continues to contend that a Domain Name is not “property” and not
“tied to a contract for property” and thus cannot be converted.
j.
Statutory Money Damages -
The Joe’s Cartoon Circumstances Under ACPA
i.
Joe’s Cartoons:
In Joseph C. Shields - The Joe Cartoon Company Vs. John Zuccarini (April
24, 2001 U.S.C.A. 3rd CIR. No. 00-2236) is a case that began
prior to enactment of ACPA and reported in a prior article by this author,
Joe’s Cartoons won not only the trial but also established some of the
first guidelines regarding statutory damages.
ii.
FACTS:
Here the Defendant is infamous as an admitted registrant of many
thousands of Domain Names that are misspelled to attract poor typists.
Whether called “typosquatting” or “piracy” the result of
the case is that one cannot take a famous name and make use of the
public’s typing habits for personal gain by misspelling a trademark.
1.
MORE NEW TERMS: Another term used
in this case is “mouse trapping” where one designs a web site to not
only attract users but also does not allow them to exit without wading
through multiple other windows displaying ads the site owner wants you to
see and buy from. The site
gets paid for every “hit”.
2.
“Wholesaling” is the act of
registering many Domain Names with the intent to sell them to the related
trademark owners and use them for personal gain.
iii.
Zuccarini makes between $800,000
and $1 million per year on typos and close spellings of famous names,
trademarks and other’s Domain Names to get hits.
iv.
As soon as Zuccarini was served
with first a Cease & Desist letter and then the action in 1997, he
changed the “content” of his Joe’s type-a-like sites to claim a
First Amendment “right” to protest Joe’s Cartoons of “Frog
Blender” and “Micro-Gerbil” depicting animals in rather funny but
sick humor. The Court did not
go for the defense, saying that the “political protest” came too
little too late.
v.
Effectiveness of ACPA 15 U.S.C.
Sec 1125(d):
1.
Zuccarini argued unsuccessfully
that this precluded an Action because the Act says it only applies to
Domain Names registered or used after the effective date of the Act.
Zuccarini kept using the names after the
Nov. 29, 1999
effective date and this kept the Action valid.
vi.
As reported last year, the Court
held that:
1.
Joe Cartoon was “distinctive”
(famous a trademark or recognizable).
2.
Instant Fame:
The 15 year old Joe’s Cartoons became popular on t-shirts and
other merchandise. Joe’s
site gets over 700,000 “hits” per month, has been awarded
Macromedia’s “Shock Site
Of The Day” and is advertised in national magazines with a circulation
of over 1.3 million.
3.
The Domain Names derived by
Zuccarini are "identical or confusingly similar" to the
distinctive trademark or Internet domain name of another person or
company,” under the Act.
4.
And “typosquatting” is not a
legitimate use. Zuccarini’s
argument that his use was “fair use” since he merely
capitalizes on typos was of no merit.
5.
There was intent to profit from
using the errors of others. The
Act was designed to rectify just such confusing mistakes.
a.
Note that the Court found the
Act’s legislative history to include an incident of a child who typed
“dosney.com” and wound up at an Adult web site.
b.
There was no “fair use” Safe
Harbor of 1125(d)(1)(B)(i) These detailed
factors are another good reason why the ACPA might be best for complex,
domestic and difficult cases that provoke more thought generally than do
the three factors of the ICANN UDRP.
c.
The Court also found under the
facts likelihood of confusion between Defendant’s Domain Names and the
trademarks.
vii.
Statutory Damages:
a.
Zuccarini had the “book”
thrown at him; the pocket book that is.
It was rather difficult for Joe’s Cartoons to prove his losses by
the many hits that went to Zuccarini, including proof of actual confusion.
b.
The Court upheld the U.S.D.C.
awards of (1) $10,000 damages per Domain Name ($50,000) and as this was
deemed an “exceptional case” under Section 1117, an award of the
$34,000 attorney fees went to Joe’s Cartoons.
a.
What about the register who
provides a Domain Name and then is sued, it being alleged that they
infringed or aided and abetted another to infringe or was vicariously or
contributory liable for infringement?
Also, what if a trademark owner contacts a Domain Name registrar
that a name infringes on a trademark
and the registrar removes, transfers or stops the Domain Name; some
registrars have been sued for making the transfer or stopping the name.
California says they are not liable, “(c) A domain name
registrar, a domain name registry, or any other domain name registration
authority that takes any action described in subdivision (a) that affects
a domain name shall not be liable to any person for that action,
regardless of whether the domain name is finally determined to infringe or
dilute a trademark or service mark.”
b.
QUIZ:
What might happen if a registrar was in active cooperation with and
knew of complaints about trademark violations but either maintains or
registers a Domain Name with this knowledge?
c.
Lockheed Martin V NSI,
65 USLW 2744, 43 U.S.P.Q.2d 1056, the court upheld the district Court in Lockheed
Martin Corp. v. Network Solutions, Inc. 194 F.3d 980 C.A.9
(Cal.),1999, and held,
“Where domain names are used to infringe Lockheed’s federally
registered "SKUNK WORKS" service mark, the infringement does not
result from NSI's publication of the domain name list, but from the
registrant's use of the name on a web site or other Internet form of
communication in connection with goods or services.... NSI's involvement
with the use of domain names does not extend beyond registration.”
i.
ISP Liability Issues:
When might an ISP be liable for an intellectual property
infringement? Not generally
for copyright infringement due to posting of anonymous information or even
defamation online. ISPs are
also apparently immune from “famous” trademark dilution and
infringement.
ii.
Lockheed attempted to get the ACPA
into the Act but, the Court stated, “There is no summary judgment
evidence that plaintiff [NSI] is a person who has had a "bad faith
intent to profit from" specific marks, 15 U.S.C. 1125(d)(1)(A)(i), that are registered with it or
contained in its registry. That the court's interpretation of "intent
to profit from that mark" is correct is supported by § 1125(d)(1)(B)(i), which lists factors the court may consider
in determining whether a person has a bad faith intent. Although the list
is not exclusive, none of the conditions and conduct listed would be
applicable to a person functioning solely as a registrar or registry of
domain names.”
d.
In the recent case of Gucci
America, Inc., v. Hall & Associates, … Mindspring Enterprises, Inc.
No. 00 Civ 549 RMB (S.D.
New York
. March 14, 2001),
GUCCI the famous trademark for various articles of jewelry, fashion
accessories, wearing apparel and related services notified Mindspring (an
ISP) that its subscriber, Hall was using Mindspring's services to aid in
acts of trademark infringement and unfair competition, including the
advertising of jewelry on Hall’s “goldhaus” website which infringed
the Gucci Trademark. Gucci alleged that, despite the warnings, Mindspring
continued to permit Hall to use Mindspring's ISP services to infringe
Plaintiff's trademark rights, “with actual knowledge of, or in reckless
disregard of, Plaintiff's rights and Hall's infringement.”
i.
Mindspring's Motion for Summary
Judgment was premised upon two grounds: (i) that the Communications
Decency Act of 1996, 47 U.S.C. § 230 ("Section 230"), "immunizes Mindspring from liability
for information posted [on the goldhaus website] by [Hall],"
and (ii) that “Gucci’s theory of trademark infringement is
barred by the First Amendment,"
ii.
However
the Court held, “The Communications Decency Act (CDA) did not immunize
Mindspring from a claim that its hosting of a trademark-infringing web
site, despite notice from the mark owner, was itself infringement of that
owner's mark. It also held the
CDA did not limit existing intellectual property laws, under which a
manufacturer or distributor who continues to supply its product to one
“whom it knows or has reason to know is engaging in trademark
infringement may itself be held be liable for infringement.
Telecommunications Act of 1996, § 509(c)(1), (e)(2), 47 U.S.C.A. §
230(c)(1), (e)(2).”
iii.
1st Amendment Defense Has No
Merit.
The Court stated that Gucci’s trademark claims against Mindspring
are not "barred" by the First Amendment because they challenge
an allegedly infringing commercial speech used to identify the source of a
product. They held,
"[T]rademark infringement law does not curtail or prohibit the
exercise of the First Amendment right to free speech.... Defendant's use
of another entity's mark is entitled to First Amendment protection when
his use of that mark is part of a communicative message, [but] not
when it is used to identify the source of a product.".
In other words, yes, commercial speech is protected but no, not
when it is used in the context of unfair competition to cause confusion as
to the source of Gucci products.
No Summary Judgment; stay tuned.
a.
Be it U.S.D.C. and ACPA or an ADR
method, the factors that make that choice must include:
i.
ADR is Arbitration, subject to any
or no law; it is decided by arbitrators, who might have certain
proclivities towards one or another political stand and base part of their
decision on those, and there may be no finality with arbitration because
it can lead to litigation as an appeal.
It is a best practice these days to at least examine whether to
contractually require an arbitrator to apply certain law.
ii.
There is a general trend towards
trademark owners being able to obtain assignment of certain Domain Names
to themselves. Recent cases
suggest that Porsche and Harrods were both saved by U.S.D.C. judges and
juries under ACPA.
iii.
Likewise most trademark owners of
marks world wide are, thanks to the ICANN’s UDRP, able to win other’s
bad faith registrations of Domain Names bearing their ensigns.
Likewise as in intellectual property aw these days, the picture is
not black and white, but gray. The
gray areas include whether an ADR arbitration is subject to the decisions
that come before it. There is
a trend towards citing other ADR decisions.
iv.
The ICANN ADR as with other ADR
can seem inconsistent and may depend on which forum a party selects to
arbitrate. Cases taken though
an ADR process tend to be subject to an Arbitrator’s sense of the case
rather than on precedent. See discussions of famous names in this Article.
The cases taken to litigation, whether or not settled tend, to lend
consistency to the rights of the parties when necessary.
b.
The forum is of the utmost
importance. The major
difference between the ACPA and ICANN UDRP rules is that under ACPA one
can obtain injunctions, transfers, money damages and attorney fees in
special cases. See the Joe’s
Cartoons case.
c.
World Famous Names such as Bruce
Springsteen can get different treatment in a UDRP hearing.
See the discussion of this case herein.
What about a similar case, where the defendant asserts they have a
right to use the Domain Name because they have been using the name for
years even decades, and they had a grant of right from the “original”
user.
d.
Such was the case in Harrods
Ltd. v. Sixty Internet Domain Names E.D.Va.,2001. (
June 27, 2001
).
This was one of the first pure in Rem civil actions, brought
under the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act ("ACPA"),
15 U.S.C .A. § 1125(d), et seq.
Harrods, Ltd., was founded in 1849.
at first glance this case seems extraordinary because it denied to
and transferred away “rights” the Domain Name registrant had to
use trademarks legitimately for decades.
Yet close examination of the facts shows that the case is
consistent. Because the HBAL
or “foreign” Harrods company had declined, ceased to be a retail chain
and wound up as a mere parking lot, they no longer had the rights and they
should not have precluded the
London
or “real” Harrods Ltd from having Domain
Names that reflect current Harrods services.
i.
FACTS:
The registrant of the defendant Domain Names, Search
Term Begin Harrods ( Search
Term End
Buenos Aires
) Limited ("HBAL"), is a company
created under English law, domiciled in
Argentina
, and since 1913. Search Term Begin Harrods Search Term End Limited established HBAL as an independent
company to separate its assets between the English and Argentinean stores.
By 1963, Search Term Begin Harrods Search Term End Limited had parted and they had no further
legal connection. The HBAL
Harrods went into decline. It
would be remarkable for a judge to order transfer of Domain Names that the
Defendant has a legitimate right to have registered.
ii.
HBAL registered several
“Harrods” Domains. After a lengthy exchange of correspondence, HBAL
canceled that trademark registration in 1976n Names HBAL had registered a Search
Term Begin "HARRODS" Search
Term End trademark in
Argentina
. On
September 7, 1999
, Search
Term Begin Harrods Search
Term End Limited announced in that it would debut an online
shopping service for the holiday season. That same day, HBAL began
registering nearly 300 domain names in
Buenos Aires
,
Maryland
, and
Virginia
.
iii.
The Court HELD: “Although not
explicitly stated in § 1125(d)(2)(A), we have … found that Congress
intended to require a plaintiff to plead and prove, as an element of an in
Rem action, that the domain name registrant had a "bad faith intent
to profit" from the plaintiff's mark.”
1.
Fortunately for Harrods the ACPA
spells out many factors that lead to the conclusions of law that include,
a.
The bona fide noncommercial or
fair use of the mark in a site accessible under the domain name…
b.
Registration of multiple domain
names known to be identical or confusingly similar to marks of others …
without regard to the goods or services of the parties; and
c.
The extent to which the mark
incorporated in the domain name registration is or is not distinctive and
famous....”
iv.
Tort Standard of Proof Under
ACPA: As
this case was a matter of first impression,
as “The ACPA does not specify the standard of proof. It only provides
that "a person shall be liable ... if ... that person ... has a bad
faith intent to profit from [the plaintiff's trademark] and registers,
traffics in, or uses a domain name"
v.
The language "a person shall
be liable" would normally lead to a conclusion that the tort
preponderance of the evidence standard should be applied since this is
generally the standard used in civil actions involving civil monetary
disputes.
vi.
The Harrod’s Court held,
“under well-settled trademark law, a trademark is distinctive if it
either is "inherently distinctive," insofar as it is neither
generic nor descriptive, or if it has a "secondary meaning" and
thus is distinctive based on use in commerce over time….”
Harrods had registered its mark three times from 1985-1995 all of
which had become incontestable. The
HBAL Defendant had no
U.S.A.
registrations and no
common law use here. Because
HBAL owned several Argentinean registrations they were “given” that
factor. Sixty
Domain Names were transferred to
London
.
a.
In 2001 the new Generic Top level
domain names appear to add yet a third dimension to the contest between
the good will developed by trademark owners and cyber pirates.
b.
These, biz, .info, and .pro, are
due to come out later this year. Will
it be another new complexity or merely a continued expansion of the law
heretofore developed?
c.
This author predicts that the
likes of a revamp of trademark law is in the offing as we just had
from1995 to 2001 in copyright law.
Trademark law does not recognize a Domain name as a trademark
however, though some legal authorities say that a Domain Name can never
act as a trademark, the Patent & TM Office will register a trademark
consisting of a “dotcom” word combination, provided it serves as a
trademark, a source indicator.
d.
Registrars are
presently (as of June, 2001) scrambling for the new registration
fees for “biz” Domain Names and NSI has a new service that allows
trademark owners to place a low cost notice in the NSI database that will
attempt to prevent anyone from registering “your trademark .biz”
without the owner’s knowledge. See:
http://newdomains.networksolutions.com/gtld/tm_landingpage.jsp
As of the date of the meeting (September, 2001) it is unlikely
these services will be continued.
7.
On the Horizon:
The law of trademark and Domain Names is in a state of flux as if
it were a rubber ball . Laws
like The Madrid Agreement and Protocols and treaty that allows for faster
and more consistent of international trademark registrations was adopted
in 1989. See http://ipdl.wipo.nt . The
Patent & TM Office has been funded again but this did not solve the
slow processing time for trademarks and patents.
New proposals must be watched, trends taken into consideration.
This will require constant monitoring as changes occur. Stay Tuned.
Services are
presently (as of June, 2001) scrambling for the new registration
“biz” and NSI has a new one that allows trademark owners to place a
low cost notice in the NSI database that will attempt to prevent anyone
from registering “your trademark .biz” without the owner’s
knowledge. See: http://newdomains.networksolutions.com/gtld/tm_landingpage.jsp
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