Sex.com Settles Case Against VeriSign
netcentr writes "A press release on CircleID has announced that the owner of the Sex.com domain name today has got 'a final settlement with VeriSign (formerly Network Solutions, Inc.), concluding a six-year legal fight that set several important precedents for the future of the Internet. After the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals granted Sex.Com a sweeping victory that held VeriSign/Network Solutions, Inc. (collectively "VeriSign") strictly responsible for mishandling the famous domain name, Sex.Com and VeriSign have settled Sex.Com's lawsuit against VeriSign.' Gary Kremen was awarded a $65 million judgment against Cohen for stealing the domain name, which the U.S. Supreme Court declined to overturn on June 12, 2003."
Ah... good thing they got that taken care of. I was so starved for pr0n for the last six years.
Really - like there aren't enough of these sites out there?
So the courts finally come out and say that sex should be on the internet!
Millions of smelly UNIX administrators breathe a sigh of relief.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
I, for one, welcome our rightful sex.com overlords
VeriSign is bad news(for years thay would not let you put "fu*k" in your domain name)
r net_battle.asp?isc=&se=%2B&from%5Fapp=
The base VeriSign site:
http://www.recallverisign.com
Check out this page by GoDaddy.com about VeriSign: https://www.godaddy.com/gdshop/PressReleases/inte
Hang on - you wanted them to ADMIT their mistake, without a court order? Right ....
Good grief - what hill have you been living under?!?
-- Ravensfire
"But we decide which is right, and which is an illusion"
there is no such battle over intellect.com
Yeah, I guess I'm funny like that.
$65 Million? Are you telling me that's the amount of profit lost? Or that's the amount it cost to run the case through the courts..
I bet all the lawyers involved are smiling, You do know they aren't that stupid. The case could have been settled 5 years ago, but then how could lawyers make any money?
Good to see the U.S. Justice system at work.
Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what's right. --Isaac Asimov
The press release doesn't say whether it was the full $65million or some smaller amount, or how long Verisign would have to pay. Google News has pointers to one or two versions of the press release, plus Slashdot (:-), plus a Wired article that has the press release but also speculated that the settlement is probably a lot less than the full boat, and some comments on Kremen's attempts to track down the assets of Cohen the name thief.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
Well, it's great that the good guys finally won and defeated the spectre of Verisign's vast incompentence and utter lack of responsibility, but SIX YEARS? I don't even want to think about the legal fees. There's definitely something wrong with our justice system when a stright-forward case of theft takes SIX years and millions of dollars to successfully prosecute.
I interviewed at sex.com or as they like to be known "deerfield communications". Place was run out of the basment of an abandoned building. Not realy what I was looking for in a job.
"Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
But still Netsol not only shouldn't have let themselves get fooled, they should have fixed the problem promptly when they were notified about it.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
This isn't a story about sex, it is a story about the internet. Unless you find the supreme court sexy...
1. Shut up
2. Make me a sandwich
My girlfriend and I are both technically feminists - it's actually illogical for a feminist to condemn porn. Why? Sure some porn is negative, but saying ALL porn is, is saying that it's impossible for a woman to enjoy her sexuality. You are perpetuating the very double standards you are trying to destroy.
If you cannot keep politics out of your moderation remove yourself from the Mod Lottery.. NOW!
> Goooo Sex.com
or "How to get yourself sued by Sex.com AND Google in one easy domain registration"
Norman Cook's Ode to Sl
You can find the decision by the United States Court of Appeal for the Ninth Circuit at:
Kremen, et al. v. Online Classifieds Inc., et al. (pdf warning)
To get the html version, paste this url:
http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/ca9/newopinions.nsf
into the Adobe PDF Conversion Page.
Only Women Bleed (Sex, Sharia remix)
Am I the only one who suspects that there was a lot more than just a phone call behind this? That people high up in Verisign must have been conspiring with Cohen? Why else go through so much to keep obviously stolen property from it's rightful owner? Why lie to the courts about a supposedly forged letter if you weren't covering for something much worse?
Very interesting.
.net and .com domain registry? I have a feeling ICANN might be looking to fill some positions soon.
Not all of the pieces of the puzzle are in place yet but it looks like VeriSign is finally being pegged as a state actor. What does that mean? Well, all of those annoying parts of the constitution that apply to governments, but not to private parties... might apply to them (little things... like... due process maybe?).
Further - if domain names are property (which is contrary to some lot of previous court precedent - partially based on the idea that domain names are only protected in so much as they are trademarks, which generally cannot be transferred without transferring the good will of the company behind the trademark) VeriSign has some further problems. When they bumble these things, not only are they violating the domain owners due process rights - but it might be a constitutional "taking" - requiring compensation.
Hopefully finding that VeriSign is a state actor, and that there is a property interest in a domain name - will be the final nail in SiteFinder's coffin (which essentially would be conversion of all of the unregistered domain names).
Anybody interested in being the
Ryan Kennedy opposes comm
Or to quote friends...
"If they took all the porn off the internet I'm pretty sure there would only be one website left, and it would called bring back the porn"
Excuse me, a proper Slashdot retort would have included some passing reference to the act of masterbation when talking about internet porn.
example:
No, I can surf with only one hand.
In future, please try to follow the Slashdot comedy guidelines!
In the mid-late 90s, domain registrars were explicitly avoiding fixing their mistakes on legal counsel's advice, namely that to fix a mistake was to admit liability for that mistake, and to admit liability for that mistake was to open oneself up to damages in the millions. Thus, they all took the legal position that they weren't responsible for anything they did until it was proven otherwise.
Stupid from a common sense point of view, smart from a business point of view. I can think of a lot of domain name fuckups that, could the owner have sued, would have sunk the registrars. As it is, they've avoided huge lawsuits for the last 8 years.
It took a domain name with the potential money behind it of sex.com to push it all the way through the courts to the current situation.
Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
I had just started at a small recruiting shop and he was around in various unspecified capacities. We started talking one night and he was really excited about showing me how he owned sex.com. He did a whois, which had his name, then logged into the sex.com servers and poked around a little. He then bragged about the cashflow and the offers to buy from Playboy, Penthouse and Hustler.
He also asked all the secretaries to pose naked, used the company phones to call Nevada brothels for business advice and other shady activities.
I was later deposed as a witness for a sexual harassment case against the company because of his behavior (he was not an employee but rather an acquaintence of the owner) and the behavior of other sales people. The company's attorneys were in the process of searching for him at that time, which was around 2000 or 2001.
I can't wait for him to finally get caught. He reminds me of Robert Vesco; he's probably funding Al Queda or Russian prostitution rings or something now.