By
Anne Broache
Wednesday, August 23 2006 11:22 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,39393448,00.htm
Microsoft on Tuesday launched a new offensive against cybersquatters who
allegedly gain illegal profits from thousands of Web sites, such as
WindowsLiveTutorial.com and HaloChamp.com, that include the company's
trademarked names.
Redmond filed three lawsuits in federal court this week claiming that some
Web site operators have registered and operate hundreds of domain names with the
sole purpose of reaping "bad faith" profits and in violation of federal and
state laws.
Two of the complaints, filed in Utah and California, name known individuals
accused of running more than 400 such sites. A third "John Doe" complaint is
aimed at unmasking alleged cybersquatters, affiliated with 217 different domain
names, who have paid privacy protection services to have their registration
information shielded.
The litigation marks the first time Microsoft has filed suits stemming
exclusively from a 1999 law called the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, or ACPA, although
it has raised cybersquatting allegations in past suits against alleged
phishers and spammers, company attorney Aaron Kornblum said in a telephone
interview. ACPA subjects anyone who "registers, traffics in or uses a domain
name that is identical to, confusingly similar or dilutive of" an existing
trademark to up to US$100,000 in damages.
"We've seen a tremendous rush on domain name registration...in particular
with domain names containing Microsoft intellectual property," Kornblum said.
"This effort is designed to more aggressively protect our customers trying to
visit Microsoft Web properties as well as protect Microsoft's brands and domains
online."
Designed to target those who registered the largest number of allegedly
infringing domain names, the new suits are part of Microsoft's broader plan to
beef up its crackdown on cybersquatters and "typosquatters," in which a person
registers a name similar to a highly trafficked site, except riddled with a
subtle spelling error. The company also announced plans to expand its crackdown
on resale of such domain names on Internet auction sites.
The tactic used by the sites named in the lawsuits reflects a change in the
cybersquatting "ecosystem," Kornblum said. In the past, cybersquatting more
frequently referred to sitting on popular domain names and essentially holding
them for ransom. The sites targeted by Microsoft involve registrations of large
numbers of domains by a single entity filled with online ads aimed at generating
click-through revenues. Kornblum said he wasn't sure how much money the sites in
question had made for their operators but hoped the litigation process would
reveal that information.
The domain name owners named in the complaint were not immediately available
for comment.
On an average day, more than 2,000 sites containing Microsoft trademarks are
registered, according to watchdogs with Internet Identity, a Tacoma, Wash.,
company hired by Microsoft several years ago to monitor domain name
registrations. They estimated that about 75 percent are owned by professional
domain name holding corporations and that 90 percent of all registrations occur
among those hoping for illegal profits.
Combating alleged cybersquatters is not a new focus for Microsoft. The
company began keeping a close eye on domain names several years ago because it
noticed that Internet fraudsters frequently used them to dupe unsuspecting
visitors into handing over, say, sensitive bank account information, Kornblum
said. For the past few years, the company's research arm has been engaged in a
project called the Typo-Patrol, which produced software designed to scan URLs
for typos and reveal the owners of domain names.
Microsoft also earned notoriety in 2004 over reports that it had threatened
a 17-year-old Canadian student named Mike Rowe to turn over the domain name
MikeRoweSoft.com. After admitting it had been overaggressive in its handling of
the situation, the company reached an agreement with Rowe, who ceded control of the site in exchange for
various Microsoft services including a new Xbox game system.