But can they get sued / charges pressed against them?
To my knowledge, thus far no charges against drop catchers or registrars have stuck regarding TM violations, etc.
This was attempted back about 10 years ago.
There is an attorney on this forum who discussed this very issue with me quite some time back. The discussions were email correspondence. Very rarely makes a post here.
Although that was the case several years back, times have changed and new litigation is pending regarding registering, selling, transferring domain names. The TM and brand holders realized that the money is in the registrars and such and not typically the domainer. I think it is a realization that you have to go to the source of the problem, much like the drug war and
Reading is Fundametal programs, which obviously on this forum both have failed miserably.
But, DocCom, you miss the most important point and that is what if the legitimate TM holder wants to order the domain? Shouldn't they be allowed? And what if there is more than one person that owns the TM? Shouldn't they all be allowed? And who is to decide which TM owner has more validity over another? This is not the job of the drop catcher.
To suggest that a TM holder wants to order or backorder something that is already theirs is absurd.
Simply WIPO/URDP and end of game.
One or more than one person/entities own the word or have rights to the domain? Again, if it is known TM irregardless of holder or rights then it should be pulled.
If one or more make a claim and that claim is backed by a simple TM database check then private auctions.
These systems and checks are already in place. Drop catchers act like it is too expensive or time consuming to implement. That is total bull.
Why dropcatchers/registrars/auctions do not want to clean up their own act or be subjected to ICANN oversight is beyond me.
It does not matter if the Snowe Bill is a bunch of crap. It does not matter that the Department of Commerce has issued a statement strongly urging ICANN to reconsider its position. It does not matter if there are Senate hearings and Congressional subcommittees ongoing as we type regarding these very issues.
It does not matter if there are now at least two systems in place to block all parked pages, typo and brand squatting and one of those systems has identified 42 million sites/pages that fit this description.
What matters is the industry has turned a blind eye to all of this while the money is good and flowing, even in a downturn economy.
What matters is due to poor over site and policing of self, now congressional members and internet commerce enforcement organizations feel compelled to make an issue out of it.
Call it grandstanding or a ploy for the headlines or campaign fodder.
The fact remains that it is an issue, a big issue, and these very commitees, organizations, and lawmakers represent the global consumer and not domainers interests.
The problem with domainers is they are domainers. They think the control the internet and every thing on it.
Domainers in fact make up a minute portion of the nearly 6.5 billion people on this planet.
Is a member running for congress going to appease the 47,000 members of this forum by voting down any attempt to regulate the industry? Or do you think that congressional member may want to represent the 30,000,000 voters in his home state?
All of this is a signal, a strong signal in my opinion, that it is past time to clean up your own act before your act is banned and shut down.
I am getting ready to have a TM finalized as we speak. All is a go and I should be hearing any day that the TM is registered.
You can damn well better believe that if a name is registered after the fact and it is sold, traded or auctioned off that it will be a clean sweep of the registrar who permitted the registration, the person who registered the name, and the auction company that facilitated the sale and trade of trademarked material. And I feel confident that I could find an attorney or even someone from the State Attorney General's office to take the case on a pro bono basis. Controversy makes great publicity and it is free press coverage that most could not afford to pay.
A statement in the TOS does not release any one involved of any wrong doing. Some think it does, others don't think so.
Am I guilty of violating these issues?
Yup.
Its a matter of time for me and all involved in the domaining business.
Time for domainers to quit thinking and speaking like a domainer and act more like a consumer and see things from that perspective.