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I. Introduction
The hottest commodity in Cyberspace is the domain name.
Between 1996 and 1999, the number of domain names registered
in the United States exploded from 1 million to more
than 6 million. As a result, more than 97% of the words
in Websters Dictionary have been registered. Given
the critical importance that a catchy, memorable domain
name has for the success of a website, some people have
been able to make significant sums of money by selling
domain names. For example, the domain name business.com
sold for $7.5 million in 1999, and America.com
is currently on the auction block for a minimum bid
of $10 million.
These facts demonstrate a momentous increase in competition
for securing the right domain. Noticing this trend,
many entrepreneurs have taken advantage of the domain
name boom. These entrepreneurs fall into two categoriesdomain
name traders and cybersquatters. Domain name traders
typically register generic names, such as business.com
or wine.com, that were not at the time of registration
or sale trademarks owned by third parties. Domain name
traders seek to sell their registered domains to other
Internet entrepreneurs seeking to build and identify
their Internet businesses.
Cybersquatters, on the other hand, routinely register
and hold hostage domain names that are either identical
or confusingly similar to trademarks owned by third
parties, in an effort to block a trademark owner from
using the domain until the owner agrees to pay what
is often an exorbitant sum for the domain. The explosion
of cybersquatters has spawned a significant amount of
trademark infringement litigation.
II. Protection & Enforcement of Trademark Rights
Online
It is a truism that the law develops much slower than
technology. When widespread commercial use of the Internet
began, there existed no laws or policies that specifically
addressed Internet legal issues. With the Internet developing
at warp speed, and new legal issues seemingly being
raised on a weekly basis, lawmakers, regulators, and
the courts have struggled with trying to apply laws
which are not adapted to the technological marvels of
the Internet.
In 1999, two new mechanisms were implemented to provide
trademark owners with improved methods for protecting
and enforcing their trademark rights in the context
of domain name disputes. On October 24, 1999, the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN),
a non-profit corporation which administers the domain
name system, implemented its Uniform Domain Name Dispute
Resolution Policy (UDRP). In addition, on
November 29, 1999, the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection
Act (ACPA), a U.S. federal law, took effect.
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