Henley.com, Reznor.com. Is Your Name Next? 160
Here at Slashdot we tend to get certain things submitted a lot. Big companies going after "The Little Guy", especially regarding domain names seems to be one of them. Sometimes I feel bad for people because they owned trademarked names, but it looks like they are just squatting, but what about your name? Henley.com is being chased by
Don Henley (thanks Netizen) and
Reznor.com is owned by AJ Reznor
being chased by Thomas & Betts. In each case, a person registered the name given to them at birth, but now a corporation wants to take it because they have a trademark. How do you protect your name?
Canadian Point of View (Score:1)
This is not 100% cast in stone; a friend registered a national-level domain by getting someone in another province to go in on the application. However, sorting individuals by location makes collisions like the ones in the article less likely to happen. The ".ind" TLD for individuals is a neat idea, but we'd still have a race condition between those of us with common names :-)
==================================
neophase
Too Much Info... (Score:2)
The following Was taken from the official unofficial ninfaq version 7.3 [riconnect.com]
"As a matter of fact, there *is* a connection! The Reznor company was founded in 1888 in (you guessed it!) Mercer, PA by one George Reznor, an ancestor of Trent's. (We don't know the specifics of the relationship, but we think it's his great- or great-great grandfather...) In addition to starting the company, George also invented the original Reznor gas heater, which was one of the first heaters designed for domestic use. To quote the company brochure:
"Reznor was founded in 1888 to manufacture the 'Reznor' reflective heater, which utilized a luminous flame gas burner developed by George Reznor. This technological breakthrough was an immediate success and hastened the expansion of gas heating in residential and commercial applications. Technological development and innovation have been the hallmark of Reznor through the years."
(In other words, if not for Trent's family, we'd all be sitting around freezing our butts off and listening to (your choice of lousy band or musician here)...so think of them whenever you're snuggled up in your nice toasty home listening to music while it's freezing cold outside!)
The Reznor family apparently sold the business to an outside company around World War II (it's currently owned by ITT/Thomas & Betts), but it's still in business today, cranking out various types of heaters and central heating & cooling units, in addition to being the single largest employer in Mercer. (According to the regional representative's secretary, the biggest Reznor customers in Georgia are schools and prisons; the company doesn't really do small-scale domestic heating any more, but a few homes do still have Reznor systems.) The most common places to run into Reznors are restaurants, small stores and boutiques, garages, barns, nightclubs and bars, especially if they're located in an older building or a warehouse-type setting. Most of the heaters you'll see are small-to-medium sized ceiling- mounted, gas-powered units w/a fan in the back, and tend to come in 2 basic styles: (1) silver-toned metal with "REZNOR" in raised letters on the front; and (2) painted metal with a small plaque (or "ratings plate") that says "REZNOR/Mercer, Pennsylvania" bolted onto either the lower front corner or on the side.
Apparently a Reznor heater plays a prominent role in the Sean Connery/ Nicolas Cage movie The Rock, falling on and squishing one of the actors.
Probably a bit too much info but hey we only use 10% of our brain anway the other 90%, can hold some of this Mindless BS
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Here's an interesting twist... (Score:1)
So I discovered ;) (Score:1)
Well, I have a free subdomain anyway... *.obsidian.darker.net - except it makes people think I'm a goth (nothing wrong with that, I'm just not), as well as my own *.distortedreality.net
Re:Legal Options? (Score:1)
You violated it by not having the banner ad up.
It's his domain, he paid for it.
There's nothing you can, or even should be able to do.
Sounds to me like you're whineing because you didn't get your way with these domains.
I donno why I'm even replying to this. It will just drag out this "Someone else got there and did what I wanted to do first, and I dont like it" thread.
Re:Finnish view on domainname registration (Score:1)
The legaleze seems pretty crap and half-hearted anyway, perhaps why the lawyer didn't reply to Mr Henley's correspondance. It's only about 1 in 5 times that you guess a domain for something famous and it turns out to be right, we'd use search engines, and as Don Henley points out, his is registered as such and has probably had a lot of visitors that had searched for him specifically.
A phone book lists lots of Don or D Henley's, perhaps they should sue the phone companies for publishing misleading data that aren't really "Don Henley's".
Re:Early Bird Gets the Worm (Score:1)
Re:Yep.... (Score:1)
Become a portal to protect your domain (Score:2)
Some other people I know are doing just the same, even linking companies of that name. Avoids confusion and creates fair access to the name.
Re:Eliminate top level domains (Score:2)
On the first point, if they do really have operations that legitimately fall under all three TLD classifications, then they should be able to legitimately get domains in all three. As for shell entities, you'll never be able to stop them but you can make them go to the hassle of setting up believable entities. To be honest, I'd add one more rule to DNS, basically 'use it or lose it'. If a domain isn't active, has no active addresses registered under it and has no traffic except to bounce people to another domain, anyone who wants it can use that as grounds to challenge the registration and get it revoked. It won't stop a determined company, but it will raise the bar some.
As for mis-use, little can be done about that before the fact. I'd say, though, that yes if you mis-use a TLD you should have your registration yanked. If you're a for-profit business operating under a a .org name, ICANN shouldn't be going hunting for you but if anyone complains they should give you a warning to switch to the proper domain or lose your registration.
That depends on how you organize ICANN. Personally, I'd set it up with enough people in control with enough conflicting interests that it's not feasible to bribe everyone you'd need to bribe. And the foreign law firm would still be seen as the interloper suing the local operation. The idea is to set it up so that anyone making a challenge within the ICANN system would, if the challenge is reasonable, have support within ICANN, but nobody can get enough support to write their own ticket unless they really do deserve it and nobody can try applying pressure from outside through legal maneuvering without hitting exactly the same barriers the big corporations have been using to their advantage to date. And I wouldn't pick a banana republic, but as I said some small South Pacific island where you can literally know everyone in the entire national government. Big law firms don't work against that.
ICANN isn't entirely set up this way at present, but that can be changed under ICANN rules. And as a US citizen I really have to question whether US law should have any say in how the rather international DNS system is run. I really think that ICANN and such should be outside any one country's laws and staffed by people who are more concerned with the technical than the political/legal aspects. But maybe I'm being overly-idealistic.
Re:Proper usage (Score:1)
Re:Why not .us? (Score:1)
Re:Why not .us? (Score:1)
Re:Here's an interesting twist... (Score:1)
Re:Here's an interesting twist... (Score:1)
Re:Why not .us? (Score:2)
You've obviously never tried to get a .us domain name. I've registered more than 250 of them in the past 6 years. Each time, it is a pain. A different organization controls each state_name.us domain, and then many more different organizations control the city_name.state_name.us. Then, even more control the organization.city_name.state_name.us names. Of course, first you have to figure-out the organization name scheme. For example co. is "county of" and ci. is "city of". Each state_name.us seems to have made-up their own complicated scheme. For example, I tried to get firesaftey.ci.paloalto.ca.us domain name for the local fire department. I had to trackdown the organization that controls the .ca.us domains to get their permission. Then, paloalto.ca.us, then ci.paloalto.ca.us. After all of that, the city turned down the request for the fire department. Also, I've had existing domains like ci.some_city.ca.us taken from the owning city, because the ca.us dictator didn't like it's content. There are not uniformly enforced rules, so it's next to impossible to obtain and keep a .us domain name. You think NSI is bad? Just wait until you have to deal with some two-bit dictator that considers the whatever.us domain name he owns to be his personal property. In several cases, I've had the appointed whatever.ca.us dictator take customers from me. It's bad when you can't get a domain name, but the dictator (in most cases, an ISP) calls-up your customer (they have that information, because you have to give it to them) and gives them a sales pitch. Atleast NSI doesn't do that.
theos.com (Score:3)
Seems there is a software company called theos, that wanted the domain. Currently, i belongs to Theo De Raadt, leader of the OpenBSD project.
The short version of the story is that Theo got to keep it, I believe primarily because the software company realized that Theo was more popular than they, and they would be doing themselves PR damage.
Re:Imagine if... (Score:1)
Re:Yep.... (Score:1)
Re:Why not .us? (Score:1)
Trademarked names (Score:1)
-- Soon we'll be sliding down the razorblade of life...
Re:Why not .us? (Score:1)
Indeed.
Hence schumann.cleveland.oh.us [cleveland.oh.us].
I don't know what the big fuss is about. The regional domains are for regional use. And .us is a region.
Finnish view on domainname registration (Score:1)
--
Mikael Riska
Re:So I discovered ;) (Score:1)
:)
It's a sort of Australian wierd urban myth thing... horrible frightening snarly bear that falls out of trees and attacks you. Told to tourists in case AU's legendary snakes and spiders don't scare them enough.
I'd still rather be hypatia.id.au
Imagine if... (Score:1)
Re:So I discovered ;) (Score:1)
That's why we need other high level domains. (Score:1)
First post ?
Q-Bert
Re:Why not .us? (Score:1)
Early Bird Gets the Worm (Score:2)
I remeber something a while back with Avery (yah know the labels) not being able to get a domain name for the company.
I know in Australia, .com.au only goes to businesses, and they have some wierd one for family names
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Bully Hill (Re:Don Henley) (Score:1)
Re:Proper usage (Score:1)
Reznor? (Score:1)
The only thing I can think of is Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails fame (www.nin.com), but I kind of doubt he'd give a damn about some random site bearing his last name (there is a industrial strength heater company bearing the 'Reznor' name, founded by one of his distant relatives, that might have a problem though - a Reznor heater played a large part in 'The Rock', I believe).
So who is complaining about that domain? 'Thomas and Betts'? Who is that?
- Darchmare
- Axis Mutatis, http://www.axismutatis.net
Re:TLD's (Score:1)
Area of trade (Score:1)
Re:Eliminate top level domains (Score:1)
This is why I suggest just eliminating TLDs alltogether. You can't *possibly* plug the loopholes to stop xyz.com from trying to claim xyz in every possible TLD, and any attempt to will just bureaucratize the registration process so badly as to make it unmanageable.
You *might* make it work if you required a federal tax ID for every registration and then created the penalty of loss of all registrations for organizations that attempted to acquire more than one identical domain name in other TLDs. Got xyz.com? If you or any other entity you control attempts to get xyz.net or xyz.org then you lose xyz.com. You could even double-check by checking zonefiles for the other xyz.* domains for references to xyz.com or IPs found in xyz.com.
Or, make it so that 1 xyz registation cost $100 and was good for two years, two cost $100,000 and was good for a year, all three cost $1,000,000 and was good for six months. Although I doubt you could make it expensive enough to thwart major corporations, since many of them have advertising and marketing budgets in the hundreds of millions of dollars and they may look at the internet as an important enough marketing tool to justify the expense.
The extra money should go towards the IETF or some entity that might actually do some good.
Why not .us? (Score:4)
We need to get over our
-r
Re:Finnish view on domainname registration (Score:1)
Should be some sort of privacy policy... (Score:1)
They should not be allowed to use any information you give them about your customer. That's just disgusting behavior. It's no wonder people don't want to mess with such a screwed up system. Maybe if it actually worked it would be an alternative.
Re:Why not .us? (Score:1)
heh...I thought about it once.. (Score:1)
Re:Family Name Domains (Score:1)
-mike kania
TLD's (Score:2)
Likewise, create two new TLD's:
    .inc (incorporated) - requires art. of inc.
    .ind (individual) - no last names
Also, fees should be commensurate to TLD:
    .inc - $1K/yr
    .com - $500/yr
    .ind - $100/yr
any thoughts?!?
thor
ps. anyone else having probs connecting to
Re:Why not .us? (Score:1)
Re:Why not .us? (Score:1)
In trying to get my name, a few local interest sites and a company name at
However, should the nic.us become automated and local governments OK the use of name-based domain names for personal use (at the moment, nic.us infers that you've cleared the domain name *.city.state.us with that city.
I'll apply as soon as I can to get bugger.charlottesville.va.us, feo2.charlottesville.va.us and maxfenton.charlottesville.va.us. but I doubt those will be approved by nic.us
As for the big company coming down on the little guy, I have to side with squatters over corporations, digerati over old business. Hell, if I had reznor.com I'd set up a NIN fanpage, at trent.reznor.com, but that's just me.
--Max
Totally US Centric (Score:2)
Enough said.
Matt.
perl -e 'print scalar reverse q(\)-:
Re:Bully Hill (Re:Don Henley) (Score:1)
Why just use your last name? (Score:1)
Re:Canadian Point of View (Score:1)
A federal incorporation number is the best way to qualify for a
he *is* older... (Score:1)
"I do, however, insist upon my right to use my own name, even if he uses it too. I had already been Don Henley for seven years when your client was born."
McDonalds (Score:1)
Re:Family Name Domains (Score:2)
How to register a .us (Score:1)
If you are not american, you can go to IANA (http://www.iana.org/) to find out the URL of your countries top level domain registrar.
-abf.
Survival of the fittest.....err, quickest (Score:1)
Re:They need to learn trademark law (Score:1)
In the UK we have a chain of greetings card shops called McDonalds it is even written in Yellow and Red (same colours as the burger joint).
I've heard stories that McDonalds (the burger people) have tried to sue numerous people in the UK for use of their name and lost every single time, why ? It is the one the most common Scottish names for goodness sake and people are allowed to use their family name as the trading name for their buisness.
Also remember the case recently (I think it was posted to
When will these companies learn? (Score:2)
I just don't understand the logic (or rather the lack thereof) on the part of these companies. If reznor.com is taken, look at reznorheaters.com or something along those lines. It's effective to customers, and saves on legal fees. If you really HAVE to have reznor.com, work with the owner. See if you can buy it. See if you can strike a deal where you'll pay to host their pages for a year, and include a pointer and keep their mail bouncing to the new address for a year or three.
A company that I used to work for took this approach on a domain we wanted and it worked wonderfully. Cost us $10,000 plus another two grand in hosting fees. $12,000 is about what, 24 hours of time for legal counsel? Much, much cheaper AND we didn't upset the current owner and risk the associated bad press.
Legistlation... (Score:1)
Makes you wonder if Internic isn't really afraid of the bigger companies when judging these things....
-sporty
rolling cows gather no moss
Trademarks are Irrevelant (Score:2)
Domain names are a limited resource, and hence obey supply and demand.
There are a couple of ways this system could work, the simplest being what we currently have: first come first served. This FCFS system is effectively treating domain names like land property -- whoever owns the land controls how it is used, regardless of whether or not somebody else could use it "better" (a subjective and essentially meaningless term). With this mindset, it is totally absurd to even suggest that somebody else could "claim" a domain that they don't own (minus the government, of course) -- it would be like McDonald's claiming to own the property next to it's resturants, or claiming to own all the land that is on all roads named "McDonald", "McDonald's", "MacDonalds", etc. I understand that it's important for companies to protect their trademarks, but the location of their business (their domanin name is merely a convenient, easy to remember name for their business location -- like saying "the corner of 5th and 7th") is completely unrelated to this.
Now, some may say "But some companies name themselves based upon their location: Amazon.com, EBay.com, etc." This works just fine as long as you own the location -- it would be like me naming my resturant "5th and 7th". However, if I name my business as such *before* purchasing the land, and it turns out that somebody else owns that land, I have no claim upon it.
By saying that companies somehow own all the land associated with their name, it is yet another way that The System is biased toward the large corporations over the small companies. First we must recognize that none of what we talk about is handed to us from God or written in stone -- there are no intrinsic Rights involved. As such, whatever we say you "can" and "cannot" do is purely fictional, and purely up to us to decide. We can decide to create a system that doesn't make any sense and ends up benefiting only those people that can pay enough in legal fees to keep the issue so clouded up that it will never be resolved, or we can choose to make a system that is simple and self regulating. By saying that trademark owners somehow have implicit Rights concerning domain names, we have a system that is chaotic and totally subjective -- there is no objective way to measure who is "right". If, on the other hand, we create system where domain names are owned by a single entity, there is no fuzziness to the issue, and we can objectively ask "Who owns this Domain Name", an it can be resolved without conflict or bias by looking at the deed.
Re:No, this is why we need unlimited top lev domai (Score:1)
This doesn't fix squatting. It simply shifts the period. There would still be legal battles over popular TLDs, like *.sucks
Now, how hard would it be to implement and manage infinite TLDs? Not that hard.
This would be harder than you think. The root name servers are not designed to be very dynamic. Also, lots of apps (and firmware) have fixed ideas of what the TLDs are. I guess this would give all the Y2K programmers something to work on next year :)
Re:No, this is why we need unlimited top lev domai (Score:2)
Re:.com domains have dried up. (Score:1)
Even if you create
The country TLDs are only of interest to foreigners (of that TLD's country) if they happen to spell out something cute like the
Re:Yep.... (Score:1)
Personaly i think whom ever registers a domain name forst gets it .
Just like owning any other resource a company may want.
If you thought some big company is going to want something and you could sell it to them for a profit, you probably would.
Re:common words shouldn't be trademarkable (Score:1)
Re:They need to learn trademark law (Score:3)
Re:Eliminate top level domains (Score:2)
Just enforce the rules on TLD usage. You're a commercial operation? Any application for a .org name will be denied automatically. Not providing network services to others? Forget getting a .net domain name. Not operating commercially ( eg. an individual or non-profit organization )? No .com for you. Just because the corporations want to pollute the DNs doesn't mean we have to let them. And just to make it harder, put ICANN outside the United States, maybe on one of those South Pacific islands who don't care about politics as long as your checks clear. Let the corporations sue in a country where they're the interlopers and the people they're suing are the locals.
Re:Early Bird Gets the Worm (Score:1)
I got mine. Grennan.com
Why I rejected the .us option (Score:1)
Most other nations (e.g.
Ummmm... (Score:1)
Re:Why not .us? (Score:1)
This goes true for businesses. If a company does most of its business through the web, they want their customers/users to be able to find it easily. Using a search engine is actually a complicated step for a large percentage of the computer user population. The way most businesses look at it, if they don't have a nice domain name, they will lose customers due to them not being able to find the place.
The way DNS is currently used is exactly its orginal intent. Name services were developed to give those non-sense IP numbers some kind of human readable relevance. If we went with search engines to do all of our reference lookups, we don't need DNS. We could do just fine with plain ol' 192.168.113.17. If you think about it, what is DNS really? Its a lookup, a basic search engine.
As for using the
I think the domain name thing should be a first-come first-serve system, as long as the person/entity that has the domain registered is actually using (as opposed to squatting). I would be pissed of some corp came a long and tried to strip my domain from me.
individual vs. corporate namespace (Score:1)
BTW, does it seem wrong to anybody else that a entities which have no corporeal existence (corporations, for example) have more rights than real individuals?
Re:That's why we need other high level domains. (Score:1)
On a side note, I've heard of an interesting way to deal with internet porn: let porn be allowed on sites with a .prn domain, but not anywhere else. This will allow it to exist, but will also allow parents and anybody else concerned (libraries, etc) an easy way to block it. If it is ever found elsewhere, it could be shut down. Of course this gets into the issue of defining what porn *is* exactly, but let's leave that for later......... =)
Re:Swedish view on domainname registration (Score:1)
"ÖÖööö, umm, like, this Inter-net thing, ööööm ummm, like companies, öööö, extort individuals, ööööö, yeah, like, öööö, we are imcompetent bastards, öööö, we don't know shit of what we are doing
"Anyone on for a little corruption and golf after lunch?"
(the swedish letter 'ö' is pronounced like a long 'uh' btw.)
-
Re:Abuse of the .com domain (Score:2)
Re:That's why we need other high level domains. (Score:1)
Re:That's why we need other high level domains. (Score:1)
Re:Family Name Domains (Score:1)
For those just tuning in, MailBank is a company that buys second level domain names, and rents third level namespace under that (e.g. if they own smith.com, they can rent out john.smith.com and the john@smith.com email address).
By buying yourname.com, you're explicitly preventing every other person with that name from getting some nice-sounding namespace of their own. The folks at MailBank aren't humanitarians, but at least it's democratic--they allow many people to share parts of the namespace that would have otherwise been hogged by a single buyer.
One could conceivably make the case that you're the "squatter," preventing other people with your last name from acquiring some decent namespace (after all, what gives you the right to essentially declare yourself the preeminent holder of your last name?)
Re:Why not .us? (Score:1)
The fact that my phone number indicates where I live is silly, since someone who's phoning me doesn't really care where I am physically. In fact, since I only have a cel phone, I'm often not even in my area code.
Right now there's a proposal before the CRTC (Canadian equivalent of the FCC) to allow cel phone users to keep their numbers when they switch companies. It's probably not going to go through because of the technical issues involved, but it would be really cool if it did.
I want to have one email address, one domain name and one phone number for the rest of my life.
(Having one postal address would be cool, too. Some sort of meta address which is mapped to your physical address by the post office.)
/peter
Advantage to having an *.us domain (Score:1)
Why would I use the longer, harder to type, more confusing domain name?
Easy. In 2 years of having slumberland.seattle.wa.us, I've only gotten 2 or 3 spams to that address. (The first one was in June. The address was spam free for more than a year!) This is even though I have my address on my web page.
My other addresses such as my business addresses, started getting spammed almost immediately after being set up, and now they get a deluge -- but my slumberland.seattle.wa.us address is immune. (Email to my old slumberland.com address gets forwarded to me, and it's 98% spam now as well.)
Recently I was looking at one of the spams that my other addresses get -- a spam to sell bulk email addresses. I noticed that the spam said something to the effect of "Our addresses are high quality -- we've weeded out all
A-HA!
Re:individual vs. corporate namespace (Score:1)
Second, people putting their names as
Roll on IPv6 with a *new* domain name scheme, I say.
I'd agree that either the US' justice system is screwy, and with you point about corporeality though. If it doesn't *exist*, who cares how much it's worth?
Re:The solution is really quite simple (Score:1)
some names are safe (Score:1)
Re:Early Bird Gets the Worm (Score:1)
But as for me, I've got a
Australia's system (Score:2)
For individual names, they have
This system isn't bad, I guess you could do worse.
http://www.id.au/id-au.html [www.id.au] for more info.
Re:Abuse of the .com domain (Score:1)
You'll never understand it? Don't be so hard on yourself. When you type "blahblahblah" into your browser (and there's no machine of that name in your local domain), where's the first place your browser looks for it? Since the world has unfortunately been conditioned that most websites use "www." and ".com" as universal quotation marks, it's natural to just put your site's distinctive name right in the middle.
Re:Early Bird Gets the Worm (Score:1)
I got my domain when i saw that it had gone on hold, so i waited and waited and the minute it became available i snatched it up. This was a couple years ago; i reckon most four-letter common english word domains have been grabbed by those domain clearinghouses.
every once in awhile i get email from clueless people with aol addresses asking for a subscription to jane magazine.
id.au (Score:1)
Domain name rights, all thats needed is fair play (Score:4)
Basically the way it should work comes down to a simple concept: Play fair. The way it presently works is also a simple concept: Carry the biggest stick.
Name & trademark (Score:1)
Good chance of domain name success. (Score:1)
Re:Why not .us? (Score:1)
-Rasmus
Don Henley (Score:3)
The solution is really quite simple (Score:3)
Heh, the same last name you share with countless relatives and strangers.
There should be a new internet domain hierarchy for family domains, personal web pages, etc (didn't this happen a while ago?). That should fix part of the problem.
I'm really surprised people haven't thought about fixing the problem instead of the symptoms. The web lends itself to hierarchical organization and this isn't taken advantage of as much as it should.
Now for the people who use some big companies name for their website and run some sort of commercial venture... you're on your own. It's part of business to research before you step into possible legal troubles. Counterpoint: you're a big enough company to go after a domain name withlegal muscle... how come you didn't do that a long time ago? You missed the boat.
That said, I also would like to see the littles guys treated as equally as the big companies.
(And squatting is a no-no.)
Beat me to it! (Score:1)
The whole domain name thing is a real mess. We need to come up with something completely different.
That's it! I'm naming my kid Disney Pepsico (Score:2)
When domain names are used as a phonebook (Score:1)
using domain names as a phonebook, or as a lookup.
We just have too many repeating names, for example,
who should get diamond.com? Diamond MultiMedia,
the jewler's association, or one of the thousand other
companies with diamond in the name?
Even if we used a
of people in the country with the same name as me, how do we resolve that?
Perhaps we should be civil and let everyone with a rational reason to need the domain name share it and have an index on that (page), then split off into sub-domains.
There are already a number of sites that do something similar.
The price of victory (Score:2)
There have been some high-profile successes against companies in the past (ajax.org, veronica.org, avery.net/dennison.net, etc.), but far more common is the silent, unpublicized acquiescence to business interests. When the defendent is a non-profit interest like ajax.org or veronica.org, public pressure can help avoid the need for a costly legal defense, as when Colgate-Palmolive dropped their suit for ajax.org after receiving a petition from slashdotters.
But for-profit interests don't have it so easy, and there are hundreds of cases currently under dispute or litigation. I've chatted with defendents in the midst of lawsuits whose legal bills are in the $30,000-$50,000 range, with stacks of depositions and other legal papers measuring a meter or two in height. These aren't surname domains, but would normally be considered generic phrases or business names; see http://www.goofoff.com [goofoff.com] for one example (a chemical company, Lilly Industries, has a trademark for a product called "Goof Off.")
When "victory" means paying $100,000 to keep using the domain name you already "own," accepting defeat from the start is the most attractive option for many individuals and small businesses.
Yeah (Score:2)
I wanted to register my last name, but this computer company I've never heard of already has it. It totally stinks.
Jonathan Apple
aka
Proper usage (Score:2)
If people would register like this, it would make life far less confusing. As well, it would be nice if people *could* easilly register their local area domain name (ie: mur.rdu.nc.us) or even better, an individual or personal top-level domain address (mur.ind or mur.per or mur.tmd - this is my domain) which was specifically designed for personal web pages. Now, if they did something like this, they cold even stratify domain registration fees depending on the top-level domain you want -
not all "trademarked" domain owners are squatters (Score:2)
Re:Why not .us? (Score:2)
http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/usdnr/
They need to learn trademark law (Score:3)
My understanding is that trademarks typically only apply to the specific trade that it is associated with. For example, you might be able to use the term "FooBars", even if it's trademarked by a certain company, if the context you're using it in doesn't create confusion.
There are sometimes exceptions on very well known trademarks like "McDonalds". But I don't think that "Henley" or "Reznor" are very well known trademarks. I've never heard of either of them before.
Besides, these people have a legal right to use their names, unless their name happens to be McDonald and they're using it in the CONTEXT OF A TRADEMARK. The Henley site is a personal site. The Reznor site appears not to be, but I honestly don't think that matters because I doubt that Reznor is selling the same thing as whatever it is that Thomas & Betts sells.
I guess these companies are just hoping that the people won't be able to afford a lawyer to defend the proper use of their names.