Out-Law News 1 min. read
29 Mar 2007, 9:02 am
The case takes Name.com and Spot Domains to task over the relatively new phenomenon of 'domain tasting'. This is the practice of registering domains for five days then cancelling those that do not attract enough traffic. Taking advantage of a five day cancellation period, that practice costs the registering party nothing.
Within that five day period, adverts are published on the pages, and any page that receives enough hits to earn more than the $6 per year domain name registration fee is kept and paid for.
Often the pages involved are slight misspellings of famous names or trade marks which attract people who incorrectly type addresses into their computers.
The case accuses the companies of cybersquatting, trade mark infringement, false designation of origin, and unfair competition in the District Court for the District of Colorado. It says that some of the domain names registered and offered for sale by the registrars were "confusingly similar" to trade marks that belonged to Neiman Marcus.
The suit also says that the sites were used to display adverts for competitors to Neiman Marcus. It says that the registrars had no legitimate or fair use of the domain names and did not trade under any name similar to the domains it registered, which included neimancmarcus.com and neimanmarcucs.com.
"Neiman Marcus allege[s] that Defendants' acts are wilful and malicious, and intended to injure and cause harm to Neiman Marcus," said the court documents lodged by the firm. It claims damages of $100,000 per domain name registered, which means that the total requested damages amount to more than $4 million.
The suit goes on to say that because the alleged behaviour of the two registrars was wilful, Neiman Marcus is entitled to have its damages trebled, to over $12 million. In addition to those damages, it says that the company will ask for damages relating to trade mark dilution and infringement, the amounts of which will be determined at trial.
Neiman Marcus has already taken a successful case against another registrar, Dotster Inc, which that company settled by promising not to register any domains connected to Neiman Marcus or its subsidiary retail chain Bergdorf Goodman.
The practice of domain tasting is said to be increasingly widespread, because companies can set up automated systems to register hundreds or even thousands of domains and de-register them automatically. Reports claim that up to six million domains are tied up in tasting systems at any one time.