Actually John was being a lawyer and I'm quite sure he knew how he was asking the question. My domain is generic because it's four letters that include the .info extension. As far as DNQuest is concerned there is no difference in what he has and what I have. Both are four letter domains (in his case four letter words) with trademarks. I have done nothing that bears any association with the trademark in question. So why is it that my case is so different?
I seriously don't grasp the concept. Lets use mine, yours, or any cities fire department as an example. Mine uses NFD as their acronym. Now first of all I'd be rather ticked if they spent tax payers money to trademark their acronym and then to start utilizing even more of the tax payers money to defend that trademark. What makes NYC's fire department different than any other? Apparently it wasn't because of the attack so what was their thinking?
All of them have the same job it just happens to be a bigger city. All of them raise funds for whatever they raise them for. Whats next the IRS and FBI trademarking thier acronyms? There's ALOT of cities and ALOT of fire departments and many more government agencies which could be trademarked. Where's the stopping point?
Do you really think the firefighters or the tax payers give a flying flip whether or not I own this particular domain? It's not like I scooped up thier primary domain that they have been using for years and years but forgot to renew and holding it for ransom.
I seriously don't grasp the concept. Lets use mine, yours, or any cities fire department as an example. Mine uses NFD as their acronym. Now first of all I'd be rather ticked if they spent tax payers money to trademark their acronym and then to start utilizing even more of the tax payers money to defend that trademark. What makes NYC's fire department different than any other? Apparently it wasn't because of the attack so what was their thinking?
All of them have the same job it just happens to be a bigger city. All of them raise funds for whatever they raise them for. Whats next the IRS and FBI trademarking thier acronyms? There's ALOT of cities and ALOT of fire departments and many more government agencies which could be trademarked. Where's the stopping point?
Do you really think the firefighters or the tax payers give a flying flip whether or not I own this particular domain? It's not like I scooped up thier primary domain that they have been using for years and years but forgot to renew and holding it for ransom.