Law

Cybersquatters hit with $375 price tag

New suspension rules tip balance in favor of trademark holders

Cybersquatters are going to find it much harder to profit from domain names with new suspension rules and financial penalties coming into effect later this year.

Under new rules, trademark holders will pay just $375 for up to 15 domains to be suspended pending a review of the domain's use. If an independent panelist finds that a domain name is being misused, the domain will then be suspended and redirected to an information page.

Donuts passes background check

Decision by new gTLD panel sparks flurry of letters

The largest applicant for new Internet extensions, Donuts, has successfully passed a background check, removing a question over its eligibility.

In the latest release of initial evaluations from the new gTLD program's evaluators, five applications from Donuts (out of 307) and one from United TLD have passed, seemingly putting an end to claims they should be disqualified under cybersquatting rules.

Questions continue over legality of new gTLD private auctions

Right of the Dot posts legal opinion decrying anti-trust suggestions

A fight over private auctions is disrupting efforts to resolve a large number of conflicting applications for new Internet extensions.

The latest missive in a battle over rights to dozens of new names on the Internet is a legal opinion commissioned by one of the main companies hoping to profit from such auctions.

design
Brand
Initial Evaluation
Priority number: 
1169
Members only

Please note: you are viewing a limited page.

For access to our full gTLD database including: contact email and phone numbers; company and registration policies and details; related applications; competing applications; and much more, please consider becoming a member.

We offer one-click instant access for $50, or you can review options on our membership page.

Applicant
Top Level Design, LLC
742 Ocean Club Place
Fernandina Beach
FL
32034
United States
Phone: 
+15038888808
Fax: 
+15039140320
Registry services
CentralNic

dealer
Brand
Initial Evaluation
Priority number: 
568
Members only

Please note: you are viewing a limited page.

For access to our full gTLD database including: contact email and phone numbers; company and registration policies and details; related applications; competing applications; and much more, please consider becoming a member.

We offer one-click instant access for $50, or you can review options on our membership page.

Applicant
Dealer Dot Com, Inc.
1 Howard St.
Burlingto
VT
05401
United States
Phone: 
+01 802 540 1100
Fax: 
+01 802 540 1420
Registry services
Neustar

market
Generic
Initial Evaluation
Priority number: 
515
Members only

Please note: you are viewing a limited page.

For access to our full gTLD database including: contact email and phone numbers; company and registration policies and details; related applications; competing applications; and much more, please consider becoming a member.

We offer one-click instant access for $50, or you can review options on our membership page.

Applicant
Victor Way, LLC
155 108th Avenue NE, Suite 510
Bellevue
WA
98004
United States
Phone: 
+1 424 254 8537
Fax: 
+1 425 671 0020
Registry services
DMEL (Demand Media Europe Limited)
AusRegistry

WCIT goes dark: deadlock hits key telecoms conference

Chair leads even smaller group of regional representatives in crunch talks

The World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT) is going dark with just one day left to rewrite the international telecommunication regulations (ITRs) and a number of significant issues remaining unresolved.

Despite 1,700 participants representing 189 different countries and organizations, large sections of the text will be decided by a group of 24 regional representatives this afternoon.

The decision to call the closed meeting, without many of the issues ever having been discussed in plenary sessions, has been a conscious strategy adopted by the chair and ITU throughout the meeting.

But while that approach has kept embarrassing public fights to a minimum, it also raises serious questions over the ITU's processes and ability to act a global convener and resolver of modern telecoms issues, particularly when it comes to the Internet.

Sneak attacks and dinosaurs with pea-sized brains: the WCIT rhetoric keeps on coming


So which one are you, ITU?

Just when you thought the shouting over the WCIT meeting couldn't get any more shrill…

The conference, run the by the ITU and reviewing the 1988 International Telecommunication Regulations (ITRs), starts next week.

But rather than discussions growing more sober and serious as discussions grow close (and despite some IT journalists' efforts to provide honest summaries) the past week has seen an increasingly aggressive stance from US-based groups who fear the conference will adversely impact the Internet… and their influence on the Internet.

The normally diplomatic Vint Cerf (Father of the Internet, ex-ICANN chair and Google's "chief Internet evangelist") stole headlines when he used a Reuters interview to launch an attack on the ITU itself.

European Parliament resolution re: WCIT

20.11.2012

B7‑0499/2012 RC1

JOINT MOTION FOR A RESOLUTION

pursuant to Rule 110(2) and (4), of the Rules of Procedure

replacing the motions by the following groups:

PPE, S&D (B7‑0498/2012)

ALDE, Verts/ALE (B7‑0499/2012)

on the forthcoming World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT-2012) of the International Telecommunications Union, and the possible expansion of the scope of international telecommunication regulations

(2012/2881(RSP))

Sabine Verheyen on behalf of the PPE Group; Ivailo Kalfin, Catherine Trautmann, Petra Kammerevert on behalf of the S&D Group; Marietje Schaake on behalf of the ALDE Group; Amelia Andersdotter, Judith Sargentini on behalf of the Verts/ALE Group


European Parliament resolution on the forthcoming World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT-2012) of the International Telecommunications Union, and the possible expansion of the scope of international telecommunication regulations

(2012/2881(RSP))

Big New Global Threat to the Internet or Paper Tiger?, Part II: Is the Internet Telecoms?

This is the second in a series of posts that takes a critical look at claims that proposed changes to the international telecommunications regulations (ITRs) at the WCIT meeting later this year could see the ITU establish “international control over the internet”.

My previous post described some of the background to the issues, and three key claims that are being made: (1) the ITU currently has no role with respect to the Internet but is hell-bent on changing this at WCIT; (2) the ITU is a state-run telecom club; (3) that it is a Trojan Horse for a plot by authoritarian states and legacy telcos to impose a new Web 3.0 Model – Controlled National Internet–Media Spaces – over the open global internet.

Syndicate content