For Trademark Owners: How to Find Cybersquatters Infringing on Your Mark
More than 33,000,000 domain names have been registered, including tens
of thousands of domain names that infringe on trademarks and service marks.
If you own a trademark or service mark (whether federally registered or
not), do you know if there are any domain names that infringe on your
trademark? Trademark owners have a duty to police their marks and prevent
other parties from infringing on their trademarks and service marks.
Hire a Search Firm to Monitor Mark Usage
Before a trademark owner can take action to prevent unauthorized use of
a trademark, the mark owner must determine that the mark is being used
improperly. The traditional method of finding trademark infringement has
been to hire a reputable trademark search firm such as Thomson & Thomson
to monitor usage of a mark in commerce in the United States. Many trademark
search firms now offer fee based services that also monitor domain names
for trademark infringement.
Use the Internet to Conduct Free Mark Usage Searches
Trademark owners who do not want to pay a search service to find cybersquatters
can use the internet to search for infringing domain names. Domain Surfer
is the web site I use to find .com, .net and .org cybersquatters because
when you search a text string, Domain Surfer will find all domain names
that contain the text string.
Domain Surfer search results display a link to the web site and a "whois"
record link that may indicate information about the registrant of the
domain name such as the registrant's name, address, phone number, email
address, date created, expiration date, and similar in formation about
the administrative, billing and technical contacts. See Who Controls Your
Domain Name?
Sample Whois Search
The following is the result of a Whois search conducted on May 1, 2001,
for the text string "hot tuna":
hottuna.cc
hottuna.com
hottuna.net
hottuna.org
hottuna-australia.com
hottunacafe.com
hottunacafe.net
hottunage.com
hottunavb.com
hottunaz.com
If I owned a trademark for "tuna," I would investigate each
of the above websites to determine if any of the web sites is infringing
on my mark. I would also check the United States Patent & Trademark
Office' Trademark Electronic Search System to determine if any of the
web site owners have a federally registered trademark or service mark,
which would probably prevent me from bringing a cybersquatting claim against
the trademark owner.
If You Find Domain Names that are Identical or Similar to Your Mark
If you find any domain names that contain alpha-numeric strings that are
identical or similar to your trademark (whether federally registered or
not), you may have a claim against the cybersquatter under the Anticybersquatting
Consumer Protection Act (ACPA) and ICANN's Uniform Domain Name Dispute
Resolution Policy (UDRP). Remedies under the ACPA include actual damages
or statutory damages up to $100,000 per domain name and a court order
that the domain name(s) be transferred to the mark owner. The sole remedy
under the UDRP is that the domain name be placed on hold or transferred
to the mark owner.
Hire a Domain Name Attorney to Pursue an ACPA or UDRP Action
If you believe that somebody has registered a domain name that may infringe
on your trademark or service mark, you should consult with a domain name
attorney to determine if it would be prudent to file an ACPA or UDRP action
to obtain the domain name and prevent the domain name registrant from
future use of the domain name. Many times a cease and desist letter from
an attorney coupled with a demand to transfer the domain name is sufficient
to cause a cybersquatter to transfer the domain name. See KEYTLaw's sample
cease & desist letter. If the cease and desist letter does not get
the desired result, a UDRP arbitration is the quickest (40 -45 days or
less) and cheapest route to obtain the domain name. See ICANN's Uniform
Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy FAQ. An ACPA lawsuit is more expensive
and generally takes longer than a UDRP arbitration, but it is the way
to go it you want money damages or other remedies such as an injunction
prohibiting further infringement. See Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection
Act FAQ.
In conclusion, trademark and service mark owners should hire a search
firm to monitor their marks and inform them of usage and possible infringement
and cybersquatting. Trademark owners who do not want to pay the annual
fees for a search service, should use an internet domain name search engine
such as Whois.net at least once a month to search for domain names that
contain alpha-numeric strings that are identical or similar to their marks.
Source : http://www.igoldrush.com/
|