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Vision. Drive.Performance.
Snowe Bill / Industry Development EnvironmentJune 19, 2008
Discussion today
Intellectual Property interests are pushing to mandatemodels of domain “ownership” and provision of services in a way that gives them the most possible latitude.
Today:
50,000 ft. view of their strategy
How they’re making their approaches to make governing policy
What registrants and service providers can do
The IP Lobby
What is Intellectual Property?Intellectual property refers to creations of the mind: inventions, literary and artistic works, and symbols, names, images, and designs used in commerce.
Why does the IP lobby care about domain names?Domain names are the unique representations of intellectual property on the Internet as we now experience it.
The IP Lobby
Then: Domain name investors got out ahead of the IP lobbyIn the early days, domain name investors saw potential and invested in names faster than the IP interests could adapt governance rules.
Now: IP lobby is organized, leaning hard into domain industry
How are they doing this?
Organization
The IP lobby is well organized. They have a long legacy -- (INTA is 130 years old).
Our industry is, but not as well and for not as long.
CADNA:
The Coalition Against Domain Name Abuse, Inc. (CADNA), a 501(c)(6) not-for-profit corporation founded in 2007, is dedicated to building awareness about and advocating action to stop illegal and unethical infringement of brands/trademarks online. Its mission is to decrease instances of cybersquatting in all its forms by facilitating dialogue, effecting change, and spurring action on the part of policymakers in the national and international arenas.
CADNA = The IP lobby in the domain industry
Opening multiple venues
CongressSnowe Bill
CourtsAggressive use of courts to dislodge domains (Dell, Microsoft, Verizon)
ICANNWorking to get control of constituencies
Assumption of direction of BC, IP, and ISP Constituencies Opposition of GNSO reform
Other entities Pushing service providers to make it harder to provision or monetize names
They’re good with PR, too
How the IP lobby uses PR to define domain industry
Intentionally inflammatory characterizations e.g., All domain tasting is “kiting”
Tying into other issues (e.g., anti-phishing, the crux of the Snowe Bill) that effectively can’t be argued against
Use cachet of high-level companies to support the effort
Unfortunately, it’s all too easy to find cases of TM abuse and use them to define our industry as grey or black hats
The danger
The clearest danger is the constriction of latitude inoperations in a way that removes revenue potential in domain investing and service provision to investors.
This is the risk for the industry.
What to do about it
State our intentions
We don’t want to profit from anyone’s legitimate mark. Nor do we want tounnecessarily give up an asset to which we’re perfectly entitled to have.
Operate cleanly
Good PR is the result mainly of good behavior, not good spin. It’s important to stay within the rules.
What to do about it
Organize
Phil does a very good job with ICA. Join that organization.
Maintain ICANN position
Be appropriately supportive of GNSO reform.
What to do about it
Open a dialogue
Have discussions with CADNA or other players about a reasoned approach to issues of importance.
Contact
Where to reach me:
Mason Cole
VP Corp. Communications / Industry RelationsOversee.net
(503) [email protected]