Still More Sex.com
mark_wilkins writes "This morning the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a district court's dismissal of his claims against Network Solutions as a part of Kremen v. Cohen, Et Al.. This is the case in which Gary Kremen, the original owner of sex.com, sued Stephen Cohen and Network Solutions for transferring the sex.com domain to Cohen in response to Cohen's obviously fraudulent letter. While Cohen has fled the country, Network Solutions is still very much here and available to offer up any damages that might be rewarded. The case is going back to the district court for further hearings."
Thank you slashdot for keeping all of us abreast of this very important court case! This has the potential to affect each and every one of us in profound ways and we are indeed grateful that you keep us updated on everything that happens in this multi-year court case.
Why are they posting this? B-o-ring. No one gives a rat's ass. Can't the editors just go back to posting book reviews that detail the ending of a novel?
Let's never mind that this could set a precedent in naming standards, can't we just watch this fscking case end? NS is not responsible, the perpetrator is. Send the award to the federal level, let the Internal Revenue Service hunt him down and levy his check as if it were taxes. If he wants to protest, too bad - he may be out of the country now, but he was in the US then, IIRC, and that is how you base the penalty part.
This sig no verb.
I hope they shut down. I cannot stand network solutions.
Most of us would be happy to just get started with anysexatall.com.
Shut up and write about something we care about, michael. Perhaps you could write an article about your untimely goatse'ing of the Censorware Project, America's number one web site.
Sex.com. Honestly. You fucking sex pervert.
I'm not Seth Finkelstein. I still speak the truth.
Yeah yeah, not funny, I know. No Karma Bonus for me!
The 9th Circuit only reversed one of the district court's conclusions. The district court said that a domain name wasn't property because it's intangible. The appeals court said that intangible property is still property (leaving out some legal byways involving documents). If a domain name is property, then the good guy can sue for having it mishandled.
I'm sure an actual lawyer would have a dozen reasons for disagreeing, but as I understand "conversion" is the civil law's equivalent of theft.
What did the 9th Circuit cite as precedent for considering something intangible to be property? They used some copyright cases.
In other words, they're telling us that "intellectual property" will get treated under the law like physical property.
I hope there's a real lawyer reading this who can tell everyone how far off I am.
I wonder how many people are rushing to register www.StillMoreSex.com right now?
I am the hub of Jack's digital lifestyle.
To the poster who said that this was just another stop along the way in a multi-year court case, that's not true -- the case would be DEAD except for this. Honestly, as a domain name owner myself, I have a great interest in seeing NSI held accountable for this. Domain name dispute and transfer procedures, including NSI's implementation of them, are nutty and need fixing, and only this kind of case will make it happen.
Now, come on, guys/gals... parent comment is at *least* as deserving of a "+1, Funny" as the next one.
That said, I *love* Bipolar Moderation (and have said so in public). But please, don't waste mod points modding me down... instead, mod parent back up!
Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.