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Archive for the ‘Domain Names’ Category

Think the Domain Renewal Scam is Bad? Check out MediaNetCom.

27 Jul

Company will help me protect my trademark by listing it on its low traffic web site for $1,117.00.

One of the more frustrating and misleading domain name shenanigans is the fake renewal notice. This notice, often sent via postal mail and disguised as an invoice, gets unsuspecting businesses to pay to renew their domain name. At the same time, they are unknowingly consenting to transferring their domain to a new registrar.

It’s bad. It’s misleading. It’s wrong.

But check out this doozie I just got in the mail from a company called Medianetcom. Their invoice-looking solicitation (pdf) asks me to list my registered trademark on its web site for only $1,117.00 for three years. What a steal!

Medianetcom has a few disclaimers on the “order form”, noting in small print that it’s not a legal requirement nor a mandatory service. But it also warns you that “Protecting a trademark from confusingly similar names in the responsibility of the owner and not of the US Patent and Trademark Office. Save your registered trademark in the media:net:com Trademark Internet Service and enjoy worldwide the recognition of your trademark.”

So listing my trademark on web site with little traffic for $1,117.00 will help protect my mark beyond a listing in the official USPTO web site?

Nope.

Of course, I’m sure a number of companies just process the order form as an invoice and send along the money.


© DomainNameWire.com 2010.

Review and rate domain name parking companies at Parking Judge.

Related posts:

  1. New Domain Name Renewal Scam Hits Inboxes
  2. Domain Renewal Scam is Back
  3. Reality Check: .Tel Enters First Renewal Period

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Sedo Sells Three Digit Domain Name For Six Figures

27 Jul

Two three digit domains sell for big bucks.

Domain name brokerage Sedo has sold the domain name 029.com for $110,000, and also moved 980.com for $40,000 to lead its weekly sales charts. Both domain names now have proxy whois registrations.

Another big sale was Underdog.com, which must have beaten the favorite when it sold for 40,000 GBP, or roughly $62,000 USD.

Here are other notable sales for the week:

.com
cured.com 25000 USD
123123.com 20000 USD
oink.com 17000 USD
dressupgamesforgirls.com 15000 USD
germanfood.com 15000 USD
findmelove.com 12000 USD
cachorros.com 10000 EUR
posteando.com 9999 EUR
fernlinienbus.com 7500 EUR
pr1me.com 7500 GBP
superaccounting.com 6500 USD
adamsfoods.com 5000 USD
engineeringviews.com 5000 USD
facemuscles.com 5000 USD
guyspy.com 5000 USD
hellohotels.com 5000 USD
homewarrantyreview.com 5000 USD
kamra.com 5000 USD
orangeconstruction.com 5000 USD
topstockpicks.com 5000 USD
vestimenta.com 5000 USD

ccTLDs
kinderspiele.de 16000 EUR
sm.de 15000 EUR
europoker.fr 12000 EUR
holidaylettings.in 10600 GBP
saunabon.nl 10500 EUR
annonsera.se 10000 EUR
independentfinancialadviser.co.uk 9975 GBP
betnet.de 8888 EUR
leathersofa.co.uk 8000 USD
esp.de 5500 EUR
irobot.es 5000 USD
maleev.ru 5000 USD
secret.nl 5000 EUR
adultdvd.co.uk 4750 GBP
carparto.de 4750 EUR
checker.at 4000 EUR

Other
randomactsofkindness.org 25000 USD
booking.travel 11000 USD
datingservice.net 7000 USD
heating.net 5655 USD
onlinedegreeprogram.org 4000 USD


© DomainNameWire.com 2010.

Review and rate domain name parking companies at Parking Judge.

Related posts:

  1. Sedo Hits 6 Figures with Three Domain Names
  2. No Blockbusters at Sedo This Week, But Sold 10,000 Domains Last Quarter
  3. Kredit.com Sells for 220,000 EUR

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GM-Volt.com Getting Lots of Traffic, But is the Site Owner at Risk?

27 Jul

Even if you’re a company fan, resist the urge to use a trademark in your domain name.

The GM Volt electric car is getting quite a bit of buzz lately, including this article in the New York Times. The article links to GM-Volt.com, which it notes is unaffiliated with GM.

Compete.com shows that GM-Volt.com gets about 75,000 visits a month, which is nothing to sneeze at. It probably brings in a bit of revenue for the site owner, too, which is why I would never recommend starting a site that uses a brand name like this. GM can quite possibly get the domain name, either through a cheap and fast UDRP or through a lawsuit.

But wait — isn’t this site good for building GM’s brand? Perhaps, but it’s littered with ads for GM’s competitors. Right now I see ads for Ford and Lexus. Even a disclaimer message saying the site isn’t affiliated with General Motors Company is turned into a contextual ad for Ford:

Some companies have made a business out of similar car enthusiast sites, including publicly traded Internet Brands. But even they acknowledge there’s some risk in what they do.

My advice: go ahead and create a fan site. But don’t include trademarks in your domain name.


© DomainNameWire.com 2010.

Review and rate domain name parking companies at Parking Judge.

Related posts:

  1. What is “Good” Web Site Traffic?

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ITV.tel named the .tel of the week

27 Jul

Telnic,the registry operator for .tel selected ITV.tel domain name to be the .tel of the week . By choosing every week a .tel of the week,Telnic wants to demonstrate what can be achieved with a .tel domain name.
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My Comments on Inter-Registrar Domain Transfers

27 Jul

Have you submitted comments about inter-registrar transfers?

Earlier this month I made a call-to-action on an important comment period at ICANN. At issue is the “Inter-Registrar Transfer Policy Part B Initial Report”. Part of the report suggests a mechanism by which victims of domain thefts can regain control of their domains. But important safeguards must be in place to not disrupt the domain name aftermarket.

Here are the comments I submitted to ICANN. You should submit your comments, too. The deadline is August 10.

Begin comments:

Running Domain Name Wire, I’m often made aware of domain name thefts. Many victims reach out to me in an effort to publicize their case and (hopefully) get the word out before a stolen domain name is resold. I have also nearly been a victim myself, having almost purchased a stolen domain name before getting suspicious and doing more research on the ownership history.

But it occurs to me, as I consider this initial report, that I have no idea how many domain names are actually stolen on a monthly basis. Furthermore, I have no idea how many of those are never returned. From my conversations with various industry companies, this number seems to be very small.

Before embarking on an effort to change the system, I think it would be wise to scope out the size of the problem. Large registrars should be asked to voluntarily disclose the number of domain names stolen in a typical month, and how many aren’t recovered after 30 days. For some reason a handful of registrars seem unwilling to provide this data, but many more will. In an effort to anonymize the data, it could be provided to a secure third party that aggregates it and reports it as a single number.

If, after collecting this data, it is determined to be a large enough problem, please consider the following with regards to ETRP and the inter-registrar transfer policy:

1. Any changes should carefully consider effects on the secondary market for domain names. Every day, hundreds (thousands?) of domain names are sold in the secondary market. Not only do “evil domainers” use this market, but Fortune 500 companies depend on the secondary market as well.

2. It seems that a common hijacking approach is to gain control of the victim’s email address and/or registrar account. Security efforts should be aimed at this problem, and not extended to become overly broad. For example, if someone changes the mailing address of their domain’s administrative contact, should the domain be unnecessarily locked down? I don’t think so. Unless a registrar provides *specific data* showing this is a sign of hijacking, it shouldn’t be considered, and registrars should be specifically forbidden from placing a transfer lock on a domain in this circumstance.

3. One pattern I’ve noticed in thefts is that domains are transferred from one respected domain name registrar to another respected registrar, and then quickly transferred to a questionable registrar. Consider limiting the number of registrar transfers within a specific time period.

4. 6 months is way too long to allow someone to initiate a theft claim. At most it should be 30 days. If the domain is important enough, it will be discovered within hours or days.

5. The new registrant of the domain must be given sufficient time to respond to an ETRP.


© DomainNameWire.com 2010.

Review and rate domain name parking companies at Parking Judge.

Related posts:

  1. eNom adds security codes to .net and .com transfers
  2. GoDaddy Allows Transfers After Whois Changes
  3. Domain Registries Clarify Stance on Registry-Registrar Separation

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Court Rules in BME.com Cybersquatting Case, Could Affect Domain Owners

27 Jul

BME.com case ruling could affect domain owners.

A United States District Court ruling in a case between Gregory Ricks and BMEZine over the domain name BME.com has some interesting implications for domain name owners. (For background on the case, see Ricks Files Lawsuit to Retain Control of BME.com)

Without getting into all the details of what was argued, here are some of the court’s decisions (large pdf) worth noting:

1. The court held that a re-registration of a domain name is a “registration” for the purposes of the Anti-Cybersquatting Protection Act. In other words, if you registered a domain in 2000 and “re-registered” it (i.e. renewed) in 2004, both dates are relevant. A domain could be registered in good faith, but renewed in bad faith.

The Act provides no exception for re-registrations by the same owner. Any registration thus may bring the registrant within the statute’s purview. Congressional intent would be undermined by Ricks’ proposed interpretation. If a domain name was registered in good faith originally, but thereafter re-registered in bad faith, the cybersquatter would escape liability, a result not supportable by the statutory scheme.

2. The court re-iterates that a domain name privacy service can be held liable for cybersquatting. As I’ve noted before, providing a whois privacy service isn’t free.

3. The court said that to successfully argue reverse domain name hijacking, you must show that your use of the domain name was not unlawful under ACPA — not the Lanham Act in general.

4. The court found that you are at least partially responsible for the content of your parked domain names since you can have some control over it.

Note that this is a court ruling under U.S. laws and does not make any interpretations of UDRP.


© DomainNameWire.com 2010.

Review and rate domain name parking companies at Parking Judge.

Related posts:

  1. Korean court rules in favor of HP
  2. Court rules against domain owner provotownecenter.com
  3. Losing a cybersquatting case could result in a big fine

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Australian Registrar Bottle Domains Termination By auDA Confirmed By Court

27 Jul

auDA, the.AU policy and regulatory body, has terminated the registrar
accreditation of Australian Style Pty Ltd, who trades as Bottle
Domains, following a the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of
Victoria dismissing Bottle Domains’ appeal in proceedings against auDA
on 23 July 2010.
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AOL Senior Vice President David Mason to Keynote DOMAINfest New York Power Networking Day

27 Jul

DomainSponsor, the domain monetization business of Oversee.net and organizer of the DOMAINfest series of conferences, announced its agenda and roster of speakers for the DOMAINfest® One-Day Power Networking Event on August 18, 2010 at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in New York, N.Y.
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Domaining III conference will take place in Valencia

27 Jul

The third edition of the spanish conference about domaining will take place this year in Valencia ,Spain ,September 23-25 ,2010 .
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Cured.com sells for $25,000

27 Jul

Cured.com domain name was recently sold through Sedo for $25,000 .
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