- Joined
- Nov 12, 2006
- Messages
- 931
- Reaction score
- 13
Does having a TM on your domain allow the domain to be yours inspite of not having paid your registrar - probably not, so that is not really going to help unless you develop also.
Even developed site have a problem - the bill says that it must be used in a "non-commercial" manner - which means, no ads... commercial websites are fair game. So tm-ing and developing will probably not protect you either - if big business really wants your domain, you need to be able to defend it in court - only the big domain companies even have the capacity to fight legal battles for domains, the small guy (me) will probably just be another statistic.
I really think we're at the beginning of the end of the domaining industry (and maybe even the web as we know it) unless the big guys put their weight behind lobbying against the 'bad elements' of this piece of legislation and manage to get it removed. Though even that is no guarantee it won't creep in again in some other... big business has deep pockets and is after your domains... be afraid, be very afraid.
Even developed site have a problem - the bill says that it must be used in a "non-commercial" manner - which means, no ads... commercial websites are fair game. So tm-ing and developing will probably not protect you either - if big business really wants your domain, you need to be able to defend it in court - only the big domain companies even have the capacity to fight legal battles for domains, the small guy (me) will probably just be another statistic.
I really think we're at the beginning of the end of the domaining industry (and maybe even the web as we know it) unless the big guys put their weight behind lobbying against the 'bad elements' of this piece of legislation and manage to get it removed. Though even that is no guarantee it won't creep in again in some other... big business has deep pockets and is after your domains... be afraid, be very afraid.