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Apple Threatens iTunes.co.uk Owner

derxob writes "According to The Register, Apple has accused Benjamin Cohen, the 'dotcom millionare' of being a 'cybersquatter.' He registered ITunes.co.uk on Nov. 7 2000, and Apple trademarked ITunes on Dec. 8, 2000. They have taken him to the UK registry Nominet and are demanding that he give up the domain."

245 of 354 comments (clear)

  1. How to get out of it... by wrinkledshirt · · Score: 2, Funny

    Post a picture of some hillbilly with a guitar, with the caption saying "I tunes my guitar!"

    One thing I wanted to try once to piss off Microsoft was to get a picture of some swarthy Latino guy with his shirt off, and post a caption saying, "This is Amil. Isn't he hot?"

    (think about it...)

    --

    --------
    Bleah! Heh heh heh... BLEAH BLEAH!!! Ha ha ha ha...

    1. Re:How to get out of it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Itsa 'hot amil' you idiotsa!

    2. Re:How to get out of it... by abshhkc · · Score: 1

      Don't get it

    3. Re:How to get out of it... by zuzzabuzz · · Score: 3, Informative

      a play on "hotmail." I didn't get it either until you said you didn't. thanks.

      --
      -buzz
    4. Re:How to get out of it... by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      One thing I wanted to try once to piss off Microsoft was to get a picture of some swarthy Latino guy with his shirt off, and post a caption saying, "This is Amil. Isn't he hot?"

      I really, really don't get it...

    5. Re:How to get out of it... by Bombcar · · Score: 1

      Hotamil?

    6. Re:How to get out of it... by teh*fink · · Score: 1

      ok. first of all, this isn't funny. it's not even that close to "mail" and "hotamil" sounds stupid. second of all, "Amil" is not a "Latino" name, it's Indian (Hindi).

      --
      "I DARE you to make less sense!"
  2. So which is worse? by Phidoux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Cybersquatting or intimidation?

    1. Re:So which is worse? by Palal · · Score: 2, Informative

      Apple had a similar problem with the 'iMac' trademark. Seems they need to get their act together and start registerring their trademarks before they release the product. But this doesn't even compare to Microsoft's hicup of forgetting to register hotmail.co.uk !!!

      --
      -Palal
    2. Re:So which is worse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      It isn't the first time Microsoft forgot to renew a domain.

    3. Re:So which is worse? by miu · · Score: 4, Interesting
      You have to remember that this was early 2000 also, everything was still e-this and i-that, it is very possible that this guy came up with the name independent of any knowledge of Apple's music service.

      I'd think Apple would want to stay far far away from Trademark and name disputes wrt the music biz - doesn't Apple Records still have lawsuits going because Apple Computers violated their agreement to stay out of the music biz with that name?

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    4. Re:So which is worse? by Domini · · Score: 1

      Cybersquatting.

      Since it's a form of intimidation as well.

      I rate it right up there with SPAM.

      I'm sure Apple informally asked 'nicely' before embarking on this course of action.

      Going to the site itunes.co.uk you will see no mention of the iTunes used in the domain in the page heading or title.

    5. Re:So which is worse? by ColdGrits · · Score: 1

      " Seems they need to get their act together and start registerring their trademarks before they release the product"

      Erm, they did.

      They submitted their trademark application in October 2000. Before this guy started his site.

      Hell, he even admits that himself if you read his site!

      --
      People should not be afraid of their governments - Governments should be afraid of their people.
    6. Re:So which is worse? by Beautyon · · Score: 1

      How much business could Apple be loosing through misdirections to this site? Lets find out.

      Small traffic...

      Hmmmmmmm

      --
      ATH0 Bitcoin: 1DnwFLXczVZV8kLJbMYoheUrpqHesjxrSi
    7. Re:So which is worse? by bsartist · · Score: 1

      Seems they need to get their act together and start registerring their trademarks before they release the product.

      They did. According to WikiPedia, iTunes 1.0 was released nearly a year after they registered the trademark.

      --
      Lost: Sig, white with black letters. No collar. Reward if found!
    8. Re:So which is worse? by bsartist · · Score: 1

      Given that Apple had a way to block this (trademark)

      How is that a given, when Apple didn't register their trademark until a month after the domain name was registered, and didn't release iTunes 1.0 for another month after *that*?

      --
      Lost: Sig, white with black letters. No collar. Reward if found!
    9. Re:So which is worse? by R.Caley · · Score: 3, Insightful
      They registered iTunes.com long before this guy registered iTunes.co.uk

      Which would seem to indicate that they didn't want itunes.co.uk. If they want it now, they can pay him whatever he thinks it is worth.

      His site was not unrelated. It directly references Apple's iTunes.

      Which is evidence for his side of the case. He has a legitimate use for a site called itunes.co.uk -- to talk about iTunes.

      Who was first does not really matter, it belongs to Apple.

      By what logic? They didn't register it, they didn't trademark the underlying name, they did nothing to in any way indicate ownership or desire for ownership. This was their business decision. They are now trying to avoid the consequences of that decision.

      The morally right thing to do is not to Domain-Squat and steal trade secrets.

      What trade secrets have been stolen?

      [slightly rearanged] iTunes.co.uk has to be UK specific as this would only be fair for local CD music distributors.

      In business, this kind of `being fair' is called `operating a cartel'.

      --
      _O_
      .|<
      The named which can be named is not the true named
    10. Re:So which is worse? by R.Caley · · Score: 1
      'licensing mess' something created to protect agains people like cyber squatters.

      Don't be silly. The licencing here is related to content, not to what you call your web site.

      --
      _O_
      .|<
      The named which can be named is not the true named
    11. Re:So which is worse? by bsartist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm not from the UK, so I'm not as familiar with the process on your side of the pond. According to the article, "Apple, on the other hand, only had trademark for "iTunes" published in the Trade Marks Journal on 6 December 2000."

      Note that was the date on which the trademark was published - what, if anything, does that say about the date on which it was applied for? How much red tape is involved between application for and approval and/or publication of a trademark?

      --
      Lost: Sig, white with black letters. No collar. Reward if found!
    12. Re:So which is worse? by Fallen_Knight · · Score: 1

      "itunes" isn't "apple" eh:P?

      as far as i can tell msot of their ads on TV don't mention appy, just ipod + itunes = whatever ahd stuff. So maybe they are keeping "apple" out of it for the most part?

    13. Re:So which is worse? by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The UK cannot have it both ways... eitehr adopt the Euro, or don't.

      Unless you're ill-informed enough to think that all Euro-zone countries have the same tax regime, what possible relationship could there be between the Euro and anything else you said in your post?

      --
      To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
    14. Re:So which is worse? by Threni · · Score: 1

      > The UK cannot have it both ways... eitehr adopt the Euro, or don't.

      I think you'll find the UK can have it both ways. You can spend Euros in the UK if you want to.

    15. Re:So which is worse? by buttersnout · · Score: 1, Informative

      Actually, no, they did register the underlying trademark. According to silicon.com they registered it in october. This guy got his domain in november. Then apples trademark was made public in december.

    16. Re:So which is worse? by R.Caley · · Score: 1

      So this guy should be punished for not being psychic?

      --
      _O_
      .|<
      The named which can be named is not the true named
    17. Re:So which is worse? by yoz · · Score: 1

      He has a legitimate use for a site called itunes.co.uk -- to talk about iTunes.

      Then let him register itunestalk.co.uk or itunesfans.co.uk. Registering itunes.co.uk long after Apple has made the name of its product public is what's known as "passing off".

      See section 3a of the Nominet Dispute Resolution Service policy document.

    18. Re:So which is worse? by LocalH · · Score: 1

      "long after". So the difference between October 24 and November 7 is "long after", especially when it wasn't publicized for almost two months?

      --
      FC Closer
    19. Re:So which is worse? by k_187 · · Score: 1

      yeah, except for the big apple logo that appears at the end, and that www.ipod.com and www.itunes.com redrect to www.apple.com/blah.

      --
      11 was a racehorse
      12 was 12
      1111 Race
      12112
    20. Re:So which is worse? by Rolan · · Score: 1

      >>How is that a given, when Apple didn't register their trademark until a month after the domain name was registered, and didn't release iTunes 1.0 for another month after *that*?

      They applied for the trademark in October, a month before the name was registered.

      --
      - AMW
    21. Re:So which is worse? by Too+Much+Noise · · Score: 2, Informative
      You have to remember that this was early 2000 also, everything was still e-this and i-that, it is very possible that this guy came up with the name independent of any knowledge of Apple's music service.

      RTFA - there was no Apple music service at the time.
      As a press release put out by Cohen makes clear, he registered the domain "itunes.co.uk" on 7 November 2000, and two days later made use of it by forwarding it to a music search engine service at his CyberBritain site.

      Apple, on the other hand, only had trademark for "iTunes" published in the Trade Marks Journal on 6 December 2000. It was granted a limited trademark that did not cover music products on 23 March 2001, and eventually went live with its iTunes offering in June this year - four years after Ben Cohen first registered iTunes.co.uk.

    22. Re:So which is worse? by Binky+The+Oracle · · Score: 2, Informative

      Note that was the date on which the trademark was published - what, if anything, does that say about the date on which it was applied for? How much red tape is involved between application for and approval and/or publication of a trademark?

      (I just re-read the parent and the author was asking about the UK process for trademark. My post below covers my experience in getting a US trademark registered.

      My trademark took from September of 1998 until July of 2000 to get processed. I think a lot of people here are under the assumption that registering a trademark is as simple a procedure as registering a copyright or filing a DBA at the local county annex. It isn't.

      First, you have to get a lawyer. Preferably one that specializes in trademarks. Well, you don't have to, but it's worth the money - kind of like you can write a word processing program from scratch, but it's probably not worth the time or money to do so.

      Second, you have to have a search run (there are companies that exist solely to do this) to ensure that your proposed trade or service mark won't infringe on an existing one.

      In my case, I was using a made-up word and I still ended up with a report that broke 500 pages. Luckily, none of them was deemed close enough to pose a significant problem and I could move on to the next phase: registration.

      You have to choose the categories (as published by the patent and trademark office) in which you plan on using your mark. Examples would be: creation, publication, and distribution of software. A musical performing act. Manufacturing of entertainment products for retail sale. Please note that I'm just making these up and they probably aren't even close. That's why I hired the trademark attorney.

      Once the registration is submitted, you sit and wait. If the trademark office has an objection, wants clarification, or anything else, there will be a delay while you work that out. You have six months to rectify that situation.

      After the trademark office has accepted your application, there's a period (I think it's 30 days) where the mark is announced and any other mark holders can register a complaint about your proposed mark.

      If nobody complains, you have your new trade or service mark. If someone complains, that's a whole different set of problems.

      So for my relatively simple application, using a trademark attorney, with one kickback from the office to make minor changes to my category classifications, and no objections from other trademark holders, it took over 18 months to get the mark (and about $1500 in legal, search, and application fees).

      I imagine that companies with large legal teams dedicated to these things might get things pushed through a little faster, but the process is still a long one.

      --

      Slashdot comments... splitting hairs since 1997.

    23. Re:So which is worse? by miu · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Yeah I did read the article and I'm aware that there was no running iTunes service at that point, but there were registered domains (and probably rumors) - at that point it was very easy to do extensive domain listings (even for domains with no dns). Discovering domains registered to large companies and grabbing equivalent or similar names in other registries was actually a mini-industry for a short time.

      I'm giving the guy the benefit of the doubt, but it is entirely possible that he was aware that Apple was working on a music service to be called iTunes and registered the domain as a result - either way is plausible and it will be up to the registrar (and probably ultimately the British court system) to decide if he is squatting or not.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    24. Re:So which is worse? by dgatwood · · Score: 1
      On one hand, we have people here on /. saying that the iTunes trademark was registered in October, which could be a problem. On the other hand, Apple registered iTunes.com in 1998, so the question becomes why someone would decide to grab an equivalent name in another registry two years later and not immediately.

      Does anyone know whether intent is considered in the UK's cyberquatting laws?

      IANAB. (I am not a barrister.)

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    25. Re:So which is worse? by drakaan · · Score: 1

      the question becomes why someone would decide to grab an equivalent name in another registry two years later and not immediately.

      Maybe he *wanted* to register the unavailable-but-not-in-use itunes.com, but had to settle for itunes.co.uk? It's not a tough name to come up with: itunes = internet tunes. I'm willing to give the guy the benefit of the doubt. Looks like he's just a potentially lucky bastard and Apple doesn't want to cough up the serious cash that the domain will likely cost.

      --
      "Murphy was an optimist" - O'Toole's commentary on Murphy's Law
    26. Re:So which is worse? by podperson · · Score: 2, Informative

      "I'd think Apple would want to stay far far away from Trademark and name disputes wrt the music biz - doesn't Apple Records still have lawsuits going because Apple Computers violated their agreement to stay out of the music biz with that name?"

      Apple Records doesn't sell musical instruments, non-linear editors, or MIDI devices. When Apple (Computer) first got into a dispute with Apple (Music) the line in the sand was "music" as though anything remotely musical was part of Apple (Music)'s business. Only when Apple became, in effect, a music publisher, did it infringe Apple (Music)'s domain in any real sense. Before this happened Apple was sued multiple times for things as insane as having musical system beeps. In general, it seems to me that Apple has acted in good faith -- it did not set out to infringe on Apple (Music) from the start, things just evolved this way.

      If I start a company today and give it a reasonable, original name, and 25 years later it's huge and infringes on some basically dysfunctional company which tries to sue me over it, this is hardly an indictment of my ethics.

      On the other hand, someone who tries to guess what a valuable domain name is going to be (having heard that Apple is likely to enter the music business) for no other reason than to act as a parasite (either by getting "clicks" from people guessing URLs or by selling the domain name at an inflated price) cannot be construed as having acted in good faith.

    27. Re:So which is worse? by miu · · Score: 1
      Well as I've pointed out a couple times in the thread I can't determine if the guy acted in good faith or not simply by the timeframe of domain and trademark registrations in the US and UK. I was simply pointing out that in trying to win this case Apple might be calling unfavorable legal attention to their involvement in the music business.

      Also, why is Apple Records automatically viewed as the badguy in these disputes? I'm a Mac fan - I've got two Macs, an iPod, and buy most of my music (non-RIAA only) from iTunes - but it seems to me that Apple Records has a valid claim to that name in connection with the music business and that Apple Computer's infringement on it is intentional and unethical - they took a measured risk in entering the music business and decided they could get away with it because they have more money and better lawyers.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    28. Re:So which is worse? by podperson · · Score: 1

      I think I already dealt with your arguments that: "Apple Records has a valid claim to that name in connection with the music business and that Apple Computer's infringement on it is intentional and unethical"

      Apple started out as a computer company. It has entered the music business. No-one confuses Apple Computer with Apple Records, even though the former is now selling music.

      Imagine this:

      Someone starts a company called Bob's (Plumbing), and later someone starts a company called Bob's (Retail) in another country, which becomes a multibillion dollar enterprise. Every time Bob's Retail sells something that could be construed as infringing on plumbing, Bob's Retail gets sued and pays "damages". First it's plungers, then toilets, then Bob's opens Home Depot style superstores and wants to install stuff for customers and gets sued again. At each stage, Bob's Retail tries to make the whole thing go away forever and fails. In the mean time, Bob's Plumbing has stopped actually doing any plumbing. It hasn't done plumbing for years.

      Now I see it, Bob's Retail has acted intentionally and unethically.

    29. Re:So which is worse? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      No, he should just give up the domain name he's not using.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    30. Re:So which is worse? by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      and thus it is the iPod and iTunes rather than AppleTunes and Apple music player.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    31. Re:So which is worse? by miu · · Score: 1
      I'm not trademark lawyer, but I don't think it works that way. Names can be reused when the location and scope of the market is different or when the business is different - your example attempts to confuse those two situations, but nearly those exact circumstances have come up before.

      As far as acting intentionally and unethically, the way I see it is that Apple Computer actually paid for use of the trademark in a non-music business, that means their decision to enter the music business was undertaken with the knowledge that they had an agreement with Apple Records not do so.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
  3. hmm... by REBloomfield · · Score: 2, Insightful

    He knew it was going to be registered, if I went out and registered 'longhorn.co.uk' or something , then i'd expect to get taken to court. I appreciate that's a bad example though, before any one starts jumping up and down :)

    1. Re:hmm... by rishistar · · Score: 2, Funny

      longhorn.....why that'd be a great name for a pr0n site!

      --
      Professor Karmadillo Songs of Science
    2. Re:hmm... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      Use Firefox?Want a FREE RSS news reader?

      Whats with the sig? Firefox already has a built in RSS reader, and your link doesn't even work. Is that supposed to be funny or something?

    3. Re:hmm... by Phidoux · · Score: 1

      It's not supposed to be funny at all. It's a link to an XUL application (Firefox extension) And, as far as I know, Thunderbird has a RSS news reader, not Firefox. The link probably isn't working because your browser (If you are using IE) doesn't know what to do with the XPI file, or (if you are using Firefox) the installation of the XPI is being blocked.

    4. Re:hmm... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      And, as far as I know, Thunderbird has a RSS news reader, not Firefox

      In Firefox they are called "Live Bookmarks", no idea about Thunderbird.

      or (if you are using Firefox) the installation of the XPI is being blocked

      Firefox 1.0 blocks everything except stuff at update.mozilla.org by default. But thats not the problem, the link just opens a blank tab, and doesn't display the installation has been blocked bar if you middle click it like I did.

    5. Re:hmm... by PygmySurfer · · Score: 1

      He knew it was going to be registered, if I went out and registered 'longhorn.co.uk' or something , then i'd expect to get taken to court. I appreciate that's a bad example though, before any one starts jumping up and down :)

      Actually, I doubt you would be taken to court, or even approached by Microsoft at all. MS doesn't register their code-names for products (Windows ME a possible exception - the code-name was Millennium, they decided to stick with it for some reason). One reason is possibly due to their choice of using the names of cities as code names (Whistler, Longhorn, Blackcomb, Memphis, Cairo, Chicago, etc). Another is that they're just code names, not the name of shipping products.

      Now, if you registered WindowsMedia.co.uk, they might come after you.. :)

    6. Re:hmm... by Phidoux · · Score: 1

      I think you'll find that "Live Bookmarks" fall a bit short of the mark in as far as reading RSS feeds is concerned. If I click the link it works for me. I get a message from Firefox at the top of the page saying, "To protect your computer, Firefox prevented this site (slashdot.org) from installing software on your computer."

    7. Re:hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well, you also have to look at how Apple works in the UK.

      Apple have no .co.uk domains, the Apple UK site is Apple.com/uk

      Going after itunes.co.uk makes no sense, given that they don't actually own apple.co.uk yet. As far as lucky guesses go? iTunes did pop up in a conversation I had with someone in 1997 about the proliferation of eThis and iThat... Other variants were iMusic, iTracks, etc. etc. Heck, even the iPod and iMac are self-referential to the whole fad of prefixing with an i- and they certainly weren't the first.

      The bottom line is: Apple in no way invented or own the i- prefix. The jumped on the i/e/@ bandwagon like everyone else and now want to rewrite history.

    8. Re:hmm... by lav-chan · · Score: 1, Funny

      He appreciates that that's a bad example, though, before anyone starts jumping up and down.

    9. Re:hmm... by mAineAc · · Score: 1

      so how is this better than sage?

    10. Re:hmm... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      I think you'll find that "Live Bookmarks" fall a bit short of the mark in as far as reading RSS feeds is concerned.

      Quite the opposite. I've used many RSS viewers, and live bookmarks is my favourite, what could be better than the RSS items in a folder on the toolbar?

      If I click the link it works for me

      I said middle click. As in open in a new tab, like I do with any link I see on a page I don't want to leave. Point is, why not link to the main page of your site, or some blurb about the extension with a screenshot. I don't want to start a fight, just making a suggestion.

    11. Re:hmm... by gobbo · · Score: 1

      Funny thing is that Longhorn is the name of an apres ski bar at the foot of both Blackcomb and Whistler mountains. They named their next-gen operating system after a saucepit bar known for its drunken rowdiness! How... comforting.

    12. Re:hmm... by Everleet · · Score: 1

      You could even make it about longhorns.

      --
      It's tragic. Laugh.
    13. Re:hmm... by Phidoux · · Score: 1

      ...live bookmarks is my favourite...
      That's cool. There is nothing I have done to force you, or anyone else, to use my extension. I guess that is what freedom of choice is all about.
      Sorry, I didn't see the middle bit in your click. And I'm sooooo glad that you don't want to start a fight, because I'm really not in the mood to fight with anyone about something, which I think people *might* find useful that I'm giving away for free.

    14. Re:hmm... by macdaddy · · Score: 2

      No, he knew from the publicly accessible USPTO records that clearly showed Apple's new product to be named "iTunes" and was published approximately two weeks before he registered itunes.co.uk. Coincendence? I don't believe in them.

  4. Not a squatter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    RTFA, he registered it before Apple even thought about creating iTunes and he did use it to redirect to his search engine.

    1. Re:Not a squatter by spike+hay · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Apple is in the wrong on this one. They shouldn't go around suing people for ex post facto trademark infringement.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    2. Re:Not a squatter by dan+the+person · · Score: 1

      First iTunes release was jan 9 2001

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_iTunes/

      Would not be at all surprised that rumours including the name were around 2 months before public release when he registered the domain.

      Think about all the software developers and interface designers that worked on it, then all the marketing people... i just spent 6 months in a leaky boat...

    3. Re:Not a squatter by Sulka · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, right.

      Please answer the following question: what made him think people would use the itunes domain address for searching his search engine in the first place? Has he advertised the domain name in public?

      If the only use for the domain has been to catch anyone who thinks there's an iTunes.co.uk service and he hasn't advertised any service under that name, it's quite clear he's been relying on someone launching a service with the name.

      I've seen a ton of sites being captured for the use of directing users to a "search engine". Most of these engines are either blatant marketing ploys or virus-spreading sites. If you've checked the Quick Quid site, you'll see it's mostly the former. If you sign up, you're allowing your address to be sold to third parties who may contact you with just about any means, including messages to your mobile!

      Exactly how is this service described with the name "iTunes"?

      --
      "Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid, it is true that most stupid people are conservative."
    4. Re:Not a squatter by blackdragon7777 · · Score: 3

      Surely you don't believe that Apple would come up with a concept, go through the process of OKing it, and trademarking it in less than 1 month and 1 day.

    5. Re:Not a squatter by benito27uk · · Score: 1
      The link you gave doesn't say that the first release was jan 9 2001.

      In fact it says "Wikipedia does not yet have an article with this exact name."

    6. Re:Not a squatter by Carrot007 · · Score: 1

      : RTFA

      this is slashdot, we don't go for that sort of behavior

      --
      +----------------- | What is the question!
    7. Re:Not a squatter by chaoaretasty · · Score: 1

      Rumours aren't facts. Not only might the rumour of such a program have not been true, but names can change quite a few times from initial rumours to final releases. If you want to secure domains for a product that hasn't even been officially announced then buy them up. It's not like this guy waiting for iTunes to get really big before buying the domain.

    8. Re:Not a squatter by dan+the+person · · Score: 1

      Opps, drop the trailing /

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_iTunes

    9. Re:Not a squatter by makomk · · Score: 1

      That's becuase he acidentally added a traling slash. It should be http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_iTunes

    10. Re:Not a squatter by goatan · · Score: 1
      At the time of registration the word "Itunes" was not a trademark and because of the way Apple went about the process Ben could not see that there was a trademark pending, so there is no way Apple can prove 'bad intent' which I believe in the UK is the only way to take a domain away from someone that isn't infringing on a pre-existing trademark, that is unless a document from Ben turns up that says something like "must remember to buy Itunes.co.uk in order to get shed loads of cash from apple when/if they have a product called Itunes"

      Apple still can't prove 'bad intent' as there is a clear link on the website in question to something to do with music.

      Ben can't take a payout from Apple as it will trap him in to giving up the domain and lose the payout, the argument goes like this:

      Apple: Well can't legally take the name from you so how about we buy it from you for X million pounds.

      Ben: Ok then

      Apple: AHa! See you were squatter all the time now we will sue you to get the money back and a whole lot more! Mwah! ha! ha!

      Ben: Fiddle sticks, now I am bankrupt.

      (Though his father would make sure there is a clause in the contact to insure this won't happen should Ben sale)

      The fact of the matter is that Apple messed up: buy the domains *before* you lunch the product (and trademark). Don't try and bully people in to giving up what is legally theirs.

      If Apple wins this case it will open the floodgates to 1000's of other sites that for what ever reason own a domain that has something in its name that might 'confuse' people. It will be a disaster.

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

  5. He should try to get their trademark signed over!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's clear that he's been using Itunes for his online binary download product before Apple ripped him off and registered a copycat trademark. This means that the registration was made without due dilligence etc. etc. etc. Just because it isn't registered, doesn't mean a trademark isn't valid.

    He should try to get the itunes trademark signed over.

  6. Dammit, why didn't I think of that... by Satcho · · Score: 1
    1. Re:Dammit, why didn't I think of that... by jshriverWVU · · Score: 1

      *drool* hehe... as a chess programmer, utilizing parallel programming I'd love to have just a couple hours on a machine this beefy.
      Does this count as a supercomputer? Perhaps not a Cray but still... wow.

  7. Does anyone remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    ... Mikerowesoft.com? (Was that it? Or did it have hyphens?)

    1. Re:Does anyone remember... by Satcho · · Score: 1

      I think it had hyphens.

    2. Re:Does anyone remember... by Antony.S · · Score: 1

      Hint: You could actually just visit the site instead of speculating!

      http://www.mikerowesoft.com/

  8. Re:Go Steve by Freexe · · Score: 4, Informative

    nominet doesn't allow you to cybersquat and then sell your domain for money.

    --
    "In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act." - George Orwell
  9. Re:Go Steve by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    RFTA or visit the site. Seems like it's in use to me...

  10. Re:Go Steve by InternationalCow · · Score: 1

    I think that Steve is not intending to pay anything. If the guy is indeed convicted of cybersquatting, he won't get a small fee. He will get nothing at all. If I were him, I would have tried to settle this a long time ago. Although in that case, Steve would have probably sued my ass anyway :)

    --
    ----- One learns to itch where one can scratch.
  11. Read the article guys by CrackedButter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This guy registered "itunes" before Apple did by one whole month and was using the site as well.

    1. Re:Read the article guys by Trillan · · Score: 1

      I read the article. I also looked at the site yesterday, before he changed it -- it was an email harvesting site that offered a "free ipod" in exchange for a variety of personal information. There was no legitimate content on it, just that pathetic phishing attempt.

      Please explain how this is a legitimate use of iTunes that does not infringe on Apple's trademarks.

      Frankly, I'm surprised Apple's first call wasn't to police. Doesn't the UK have laws against online credit card fraud?

      If he doesn't back down, Apple will end up with his undersized spammer testicles in a jar. But I'm sure he'll back down as soon as the initial round of publicity has passed.

      Meanwhile, a lot of people who should know better are eating it up.

      The first rule of spam is "Spammers lie."

    2. Re:Read the article guys by CrackedButter · · Score: 1


      I'll agree his use now is not 100% kosher, from what the article states however, he registered it in the year 2000, thats before the ipods inception btw. So he has had other uses for it.
      However, don't get me wrong, I want Apple to own this site and they can do with the clause mentioned in the article. My opinion is merely to give some balance to the whole discussion before all the mac heads scream "rape" on a story which doesn't have all the facts. I use a mac as well btw

    3. Re:Read the article guys by bsartist · · Score: 1

      he registered it in the year 2000, thats before the ipods inception

      That's also before the iTunes 1.0 release, in Jan 2001.

      --
      Lost: Sig, white with black letters. No collar. Reward if found!
    4. Re:Read the article guys by Trillan · · Score: 1

      Thanks for explaining. I agree with you now. I thought you were nuts before. :)

    5. Re:Read the article guys by goatan · · Score: 1
      However, don't get me wrong, I want Apple to own this site and they can do with the clause mentioned in the article. My opinion is merely to give some balance to the whole discussion before all the mac heads scream "rape" on a story which doesn't have all the facts. I use a mac as well btw

      The point is Ben Cohen legally owns itunes.co.uk. there is no legal way for apple to take it off him. What he is using it for is irelavant.

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    6. Re:Read the article guys by boodaman · · Score: 1


      If he's using someone's mark in a way that damages the mark, or devalues the mark, he almost certainly has a glaring liability and Apple almost certainly has a case.

      Registering a domain does not give you carte blanche to do whatever you want with someone's trademark.

      If Apple can prove his use of that domain name damages their mark, they can "take it off him" quite easily.

      You simply can't appropriate someone's mark and use it however you want, and you certainly can't use it for commercial gain, especially if you are doing something similar. Even in the UK. That's the whole point of trademarks in the first place.

  12. Who had an iTunes domain first? (Doesn't matter) by Shag · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Hmmm... looks like the itunes.com domain in the US has been registered since 1998. I'm not sure, though, whether it's been Apple's possession all that time. If not, it might be interesting to look at exactly what date it came into Apple's possession. If the date is after November 7, 2000, then yeah, he'd obviously have had to be psychic.

    That said, regardless of who did what first, Apple's almost certainly going to argue that someone else having an "iTunes" domain name in a commercial space in a country where they're offering their product and store, and that person doing something with said domain that pertains to music, is obviously cause for confusion.

    (I dare say it's more cause for confusion than Apple being called Apple and selling music, whilst at the same time the Beatles' music company is called Apple.)

    --
    Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
  13. Re:Who had an iTunes domain first? (Doesn't matter by CobwoyNeal · · Score: 1

    Or have insider information from apple employees that were developing it before the product was publicly anounced.

  14. Hate to side with the big boys... by wcitechnologies · · Score: 1, Troll
    I hate to side with the giant company and all, but I have to. To register a domain with the intent of selling it back to another already established company or idea is just wrong.


    I lost my father's business website, because at the time I was just an ignorant cyber-pup (aka, n00b), and eventually had to just register a new version of his company name, because we didn't have the capital for a legal battle.


    After two years, we finally got it back because the squatter gave up on selling it to us and let the name expire. So, if you can't have the legal system kick a squatter's ass, let Father Time do it!

    --
    Electrons are free; it is moving them that becomes expensive.
  15. Re:Who had an iTunes domain first? (Doesn't matter by JanneM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of course, if he registered before Apple for that purpose, then it's Apple that's causing confusion regarding his venture, not the other way around, and should be the ones to back down.

    --
    Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
  16. Re:Who had an iTunes domain first? (Doesn't matter by phreakv6 · · Score: 2, Informative

    If the date is after November 7, 2000, then yeah, he'd obviously have had to be psychic.

    whois database shows that it was
    Registered on: 07-Nov-2000
    and not after Nov 7.. so guess he is not psychic :)

    --
    fifteen jugglers, five believers
  17. Re:Go Steve by benito27uk · · Score: 1
    As you obviously haven't RTFA you won't realise that the guy isn't cybersquatting, he registered the site a month BEFORE Apple registered the Trademark, and the limited trademark that was registered did not cover music products.

    Why should he settle, two days after he registered the site he made use of it by forwarding it to a music search engine service at his CyberBritain site.

  18. Dig deeper by tm2b · · Score: 4, Insightful

    At first glance, this would seem to be an abuse.

    Here's the thing, though - the domain now points at a site that specifically talks about a program "for Apple's iTunes."

    If the domain were used for something completely unrelated to Apple's program, I think Apple would be unreasonable for attacking the registration. However, the domain is instead being used to undermine Apple's specific trademark and as such is, I think, arguably fair game.

    The Register article really errs in not even mentioning this aspect.

    --
    "It is our blasphemy which has made us great, and will sustain us, and which the gods secretly admire in us." - Zelazny
    1. Re:Dig deeper by dustinbarbour · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wait wait wait.. Where do you see him selling a program "for Apple's iTunes"? I find "Apple" on the page only once and that is within this sentence: "Join today and not only get £5 free, but also a chance to win an Apple iPod with £50 worth of iTunes for free." Certainly giving away free iPods isn't a crime. So where is his infraction? On top of that, if he domain truly weas registered back in 2000 as a previous poster noted, I'd say Apple was screwed and that, if Apple wanted the domain, they should make him an offer he can't refuse. He can't be making any sort of income from that website. I mean, come on.. I've seen better work done with Frontpage!

    2. Re:Dig deeper by goatan · · Score: 2, Informative
      If the domain were used for something completely unrelated to Apple's program, I think Apple would be unreasonable for attacking the registration.

      Apple are unreasonable because he registered it before apple even trademarked itunes if they hadn't have been so secret about they would have a leg to stand but they don't.

      However, the domain is instead being used to undermine Apple's specific trademark and as such is, I think, arguably fair game.

      it was originally a music search engine long before Apple's itunes existed, in what way does it undermine apples trademark (bear in mind the website was registered before the trade mark). If you had dug a little deeper and read the accompanying text

      CyberBritain, innocently registered the ITUNES.co.uk domain name and used it for four years before it was contacted by Apple Computer Inc's solicitors in November of this year. On the 30th November, Apple issued Nominet proceedings (domain authority) to gain control of the ITUNES.co.uk domain name.

      CyberBritain now forwards the ITUNES.co.uk domain name to a music promotion on its associated website, QuickQuid.com. you would have realised that they have taken down the music search site because of apples actions and pointed it to quick quid which happens to contain an advert for itunes amongst others (not the best move) but the original website was fair use and he should have been left as it was rather than being taken down in a panic.

      I hope Mr Cohen takes apple to court they are trying to turn into MS MK2, it's First come first served Mr Cohen was first and he would probably win if this went to a court of law.

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    3. Re:Dig deeper by tm2b · · Score: 1

      Interesting. It's changed - Item number 1 on the site when I posted that listed "Apple's iTunes" right after Ebay [sic] and, IIRC, before CDWow.

      --
      "It is our blasphemy which has made us great, and will sustain us, and which the gods secretly admire in us." - Zelazny
    4. Re:Dig deeper by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      Would you say the same thing if it was Microsoft instead of Apple?

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
  19. Re:He should try to get their trademark signed ove by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
    On his own website, he acknowledges that Apple had applied for the trademark before he registered the domain:
    Apple Computer Inc applied for a trademark for the name "ITUNES" on the 27th October 2000.
    If anything, HIS registration was made without due diligence.
    • Proud To Be An Anonymous Coward.
  20. Pot. Kettle. Black. by Gilesx · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hmm so Microsoft do this to poor old Mike Rowe, and it's yet another example of the nasty corporate behemouth, yet when Apple do the same thing to someone who registered the domain BEFORE it was a registered Apple trademark, and they're to be praised for their actions?

    What's equally surprising is that it's not as if Apple haven't had their share of trademark issues with the record label of the same name owned by The Beatles.

    So Microsoft and The Beatles bad, Apple good? How on earth did they achieve this demi-god status amongst everyone?

    --
    Sunday you're Thinking Different, Monday you're a huge tool, paying too much and waiting to think like everyone else.
    1. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by Neophytus · · Score: 1

      It isn't good on apple's part. Not at all.

      They were caught out: Their trademark was made public after the domain was registered, hence impossible to prove that it was registered with malicious intent. Tough luck, and I hope that this one fails.

    2. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by davmoo · · Score: 1, Troll

      You must be new here.

      See, here's how it works on Slashdot. Microsoft is everything evil. Apple is everything good. The fact that they are both capitalistic megacorps is irrelevant. When Microsoft does it, its a monopolistic dirty trick and they should be crushed by the government. When Apple does it, its good marketing strategy and we should support them by buying their products. Bill Gates is Satan. Steve Jobs is God. Those who question this philosophy are minions of BillGatus of Borg, and must be crushed at all cost.

      And I'm sure that, in fine Slashdot tradition, this reply will get modded down because I dare blaspheme the name of Apple and Jobs.

      --
      I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
    3. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by liangzai · · Score: 1

      Because Apple is the good guy, just trying to protect what is theirs. iTunes is a little jewel with a remarkably crisp and unique brand name.

      Beatles, on the other hand, is the ugly guy who wanted to squeeze some extra money from Apple, although there never was any conflict of brands with this very generic name.

      Microsoft, finally, wants to dominate the universe and own everything, and is therefore automatically the bad guy. If they occasionally are right, people still oppose them, on principle grounds.

    4. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by lachlan76 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This guy registered itunes.co.uk. iTunes is an Apple product.

      Mike Rowe registered a site with his own name. I wouldn't feel the same way if Apple was trying to get the domain eyetunes.co.uk.

    5. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by carou · · Score: 1

      This guy registered itunes.co.uk. iTunes is an Apple product.

      Not at the time he registered it, it wasn't!

    6. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by krymsin01 · · Score: 1

      I can see the argument that a few people are making that there were obviously rumors of itunes before the public release of iTunes.

      --
      stuff
    7. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 1

      Beatles, on the other hand, is the ugly guy who wanted to squeeze some extra money from Apple, although there never was any conflict of brands with this very generic name.

      Absurd. Either you know nothing about this or else you are lying. Apple records took action against Apple computer when they first started up. Apple computer did not have deep pockets at that point, it was not about getting money, it was about preventing Apple Computer from infringing on their trademark. To resolve this, Apple Computer entered into an agreement with Apple records that they wouldn't enter the music industry.

      Apple Computer have now throughly tramnpled all over that agreement.

      This is well documented and well known.

      --
      To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
    8. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by wagemonkey · · Score: 1

      Yes, I mean it's so inconvenient to have to keep to agreements that were made before.
      Why shouldn't a company be allowed to ignore anything that stops them doing what they want to?

    9. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by rmohr02 · · Score: 1

      Mike Rowe publicly said he registered "MikeRoweSoft.com" because it sounded like microsoft.com. Microsoft was justified in pursuing him.

      Assuming the owner of itunes.co.uk did not know of the Apple product of the same name at the time he registered the domain, he should be fine.

      So I guess I just disagree with everyone then.

    10. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

      Steve Jobs is God.

      No no, he just likes to think he is.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    11. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by priceb · · Score: 1

      Not every one here likes apple! I personaly dispise them, and microsoft. From what I can tell the majority of people here use Linux, not Apple.

    12. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by milkman_matt · · Score: 1

      Hmm so Microsoft do this to poor old Mike Rowe, and it's yet another example of the nasty corporate behemouth, yet when Apple do the same thing to someone who registered the domain BEFORE it was a registered Apple trademark, and they're to be praised for their actions?

      The way I see it, and I could be wrong, is not that it's a matter of "Apple Bad, Microsoft Good". My reasoning behind thinking that MS are the assholes in the Mike Rowe incident, and Apple being in the right here is the simple fact that it's "Microsoft" not "Mikerowesoft" and "Windows" not "Lindows" Microsoft is suing people for making things that SOUND like their product names. Apple is trying to get back a domain which IS a product name, it's not "eTunes" or "lTunes" or anything like that, it's "iTunes" that's being used. It's blatent. Mike Rowe was the guy's name for God's sake.. that was just out of line trying to steal HIS domain.

      -matt

    13. Re:Pot. Kettle. Black. by krymsin01 · · Score: 1

      I'm the PLANTIFF!

      --
      stuff
  21. why are the so many people who are incapable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    why are the so many people who are incapable of erading anything other than the subject of the article?

    1. Re:why are the so many people who are incapable by thetroll123 · · Score: 1

      why are the so many people who are incapable of erading anything other than the subject of the article?

      Poor eductation, perhaps, or just laziness. Same reason some people cannot psell properly.

  22. Re:Who had an iTunes domain first? (Doesn't matter by bazily · · Score: 1

    The only problem being that Apple themselves caused the confusion. Based the their story, Apple registered itunes on a restricted basis not to include music. Obviously their legal team knew they were screwed, but put it off for later. Then Apple tried in 2003 to add the music bit, which is still in progress.

    Apple will likely convince the trendy users that someone stole their domain and win in the court of public opinion even though they don't have any rights. Sure Bono, Sean Penn, or some other outspoken celebrity idiot will offer their 2 expert cents about domain registration soon.

    --
    Why cut IT when your office space costs $3/sf? gibso
  23. RTFA by pjt33 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    To register a domain with the intent of selling it back to another already established company or idea is just wrong.
    Indeed. However, there's nothing wrong with registering a domain with the intent of using it, not knowing that a big company is going to release a product with the same name at some point in the future.
    1. Re:RTFA by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      ***Re:RTFA (Score:0)
      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 08, @06:06AM (#11030512)
      To bad that's not what he did.***

      from tfa:**All in all, the domain was registered before iTunes, as Apple knows it, existed. How it can then expect to extend its rights back in time is something an IP lawyer will have to try to argue. As such, Apple can waste £750 taking the case through Nominet or it can do what it should have done as soon as it realised Mr Cohen was not going to fold under pressure and offer a decent price for something that isn't its property.

      Apple has so far refused to comment on the case. Although it is currently being investigated by the authorities for price fixing with its iTunes service, so it probably has its hands full. ®**

      he started to use the name to forward people to his site before apple started using itunes name..

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    2. Re:RTFA by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      Why does it matter what he originally did? At this point in time he is most defintely using the iTunes name recognition to get redirects to QuickQuid.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    3. Re:RTFA by KillerDeathRobot · · Score: 1

      he started to use the name to forward people to his site before apple started using itunes name..

      No, Apple applied for the iTunes patent 2 weeks before he registered the name.

      --
      Thinkin' Lincoln - a web comic of presidential proportions
  24. Re:Who had an iTunes domain first? (Doesn't matter by dustinbarbour · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'll never understand all of this copyright nonsense. Seriously.. So the guy registered itunes.co.uk and uses it for music related commerce. Who cares? The site is OBVIOUSLY not realted to Apple and any shmuck who thinks he's doing business with Apple Computers while at the site is retarded. Apple needs to get over it. Buy the man off. Give him 50,000 British pounds and I would bet my balls that he'd give up the domain. I mean, that would be more than he could possibly be getting from sales.

  25. Who had APPLE firts. Does that matter? by lucason · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Apple shouldn't even be selling music as a result of their agreement with "APPLE music". (You know, the beatles' record label...)

    Amayzing that they are now defending what they were then refuting.

    It's kind of like MS ripping off windowed GUI and then pattenting their own. (Oops I just cited precedent...)

    1. Re:Who had APPLE firts. Does that matter? by lucason · · Score: 1

      "i really think apple records has no case bceause ask anyone who apple is they will point at apple computer."

      Well, in that case they DO have a case...

      Apple argued that there was no confucion because one was music and the other was computers. Trademark law does not take into account "polls" on where people would "point".

      Apple music was first in using the word for a music distibution company. And that gives them the right to use it for that purpose. iTunes violates that.

  26. Doesn't really matter, does it? by Trillan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I checked this out while it was still news, before Slashdot ran the story. Then, the site featured a giant picture of the iPod front and center with "GET AN IPOD FREE!" Yup, another stupid scam page.

    No, this guy is not innocent. Best case is that this guy is a lying weasel of a spammer who latched on to the domain name out of thousands. Worst case is he heard a rumor. Either way, once iTunes was publicly announced he clearly violated trademark law in deliberately causing confusion amongst consumers about what the website represented.

    This guy is abusing Apple's trademark to harvest email addresses. Whether or not he got there before Apple registered the site is irrelevant because it *is* registered and he does not have a legitimate use for the name.

    Also, Apple had been working on iTunes for some time before the registration date. Do you think a new product magically appears in a month? (Even thought it was based on SoundJam, it still represented many changes.)

    What has happened is that the guy has realized he will lose, so he went crying to the media and changed the site a little so it isn't so clear a violation. Morons like you ate it up. In a few days, after he think he's milked the free publicity as much as he can risk, he'll sell out to Apple.

    I hope he doesn't -- Apple would end up with his testicles in a jar. But he will. And he'll probably use the opportunity to cry more tears to the media.

    1. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by CaptainZapp · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Also, Apple had been working on iTunes for some time before the registration date. Do you think a new product magically appears in a month? (Even thought it was based on SoundJam, it still represented many changes.)

      Not that I have sympathy for the guy (I really don't know enough about the whole issue), but if Apple worked on iTunes for years, knew that they would call it iTunes and didn't register the trademark during the development phase, then they are dumber then a dim light bulb for a billion $ company.

      --
      ich bin der musikant

      mit taschenrechner in der hand

      kraftwerk

    2. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by Trillan · · Score: 1

      Not years... the deal seems to have been made around June 2000 (when they contacted Panic about "the future of Audion"). But yeah, I agree. Assuming they had a product name at that point, they should have grabbed the domain name.

      Maybe they were concerned about letting the cat out of the bag? Either way it was stupid, and I'd wager Apple's policy for that sort of thing changed immediately. A pretty safe bet, if you look at some of the domain names Apple's registered since.

    3. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by Trillan · · Score: 1

      I did. It's extraordinarily easy to prove that Apple's iWhatever scheme has existed since 1998, and has been applied to software since at least 1999 (I didn't bother searching earlier). It's also incredibly easy to show that the first mention of iTunes was related to Apple's product, and that itunes.co.uk wasn't mentioned anywhere before December 2003 (I didn't bother checking later, that's late enough). It's also easy to prove the site was never archived, and it wasn't submitted to any major search engines. For that matter, it's easy to show that Apple's iTunes product was at least in the planning stages by June 2000.

      Care to post a counter link from one of your "associated caches" that shows the spammer using that domain name for anything other than (re/mis)-direction, shill?

    4. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by Curtman · · Score: 1

      then they are dumber then a dim light bulb for a billion $ company

      Not to mention the iEverything nomenclature is really stupid. Come on Woz, you can do better than that.

    5. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by Nexum · · Score: 1

      Woz left Apple over a decade ago.

      --

      This sig has been deprecated.
    6. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by Curtman · · Score: 1

      Woz is everywhere.

    7. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by goatan · · Score: 1
      Worst case is he heard a rumor

      Thats a very mild worst case.

      I hope he doesn't -- Apple would end up with his testicles in a jar. But he will. And he'll probably use the opportunity to cry more tears to the media

      there is precident that says he won't The fact of the matter is that Apple messed up: buy the domains *before* you lunch the product (and trademark). Don't try and bully people in to giving up what is legally theirs. As the law stands Apple failed to do things in the correct order.

      how is this diffrent from Katie.com? is it' because it's apple that it's diffrent.

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    8. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by v1 · · Score: 1

      It's not even possible to view the "terms" for giving away your info at that site, the link on "terms" (http://www.quickquid.com/terms) is 404.

      Handy, isn't that?

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    9. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by macdaddy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You never registered upcoming products when they are a secret. That would be the stupidest thing you could possibly do. You keep it a secret until you're ready to go public. Then you make your application. And it doesn't matter if they applied or not. If they can prove that they used the name internally before what's his name then he's screwed. iTunes 1.0 was basically a new skin on SoundJam by Casady and Greene. Granted it was missing features found in SoundJam but it still wasn't anything more than a repackaged SoundJam when it got right down to it. It was made by the same person after all. It wasn't until later releases that it became it's own product. Apple bought the rights to the product from Casady and Greene and the SoundJam author and then hired the author to continue working on the newly born iTunes in house. All Apple has to do is show that they used the name internally via emails or other documents and the UK guy is screwed.

    10. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by macdaddy · · Score: 1

      I checked The Wayback Machine and didn't find any mention of itunes.co.uk in there. Granted that's not definitive but to not have a single listing or even a link to the site is a bit odd if this site's supposed to be in active use. Even my new personal domain that I've had for a couple months now and haven't even put any real HTML pages up on are archived in the Wayback Machine. This strikes me as odd. Yes, I know about the Wayback Machine honoring robots.txt but that doesn't matter because he doesn't have one. I smell a scam I think.

    11. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      That's the slippery slope of Trade Secrets. They have to be kept secret, and hence the whole reason for intellectual property protections. You're not required to register your IP (and keep it a trade secret), but you run the risk that a leak will make your IP a commodity.

      Apple gambled and lost.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    12. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by Draoi · · Score: 1
      Just because one idiot can come up with something that doesn't get included in any of the major caches anywhere, and happens to disprove the article?

      I've seen it, too; the usual 'Free iPod' harvesting scheme. I just took another look and the guy has changed the colour scheme & tidied the site in a big way. This story was all over the Register and Mac blogs since the weekend & I guess the guy tidied it up for the mainstream press ....

      --
      Alison

      "It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." - Albert Einstein

    13. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by Draoi · · Score: 1
      I checked The Wayback Machine and didn't find any mention of itunes.co.uk in there

      Yeah, that's the first place I checked, too. Not a single page in the archive, considering the domain is over 4 years old.

      Yes, I know about the Wayback Machine honoring robots.txt but that doesn't matter because he doesn't have one.

      Well, he doesn't have one NOW!! :-) Besides, all the site is is a frameset sucking in the contents of his cyberbritain.co.uk site, so I'm guessing archivers won't archive across domains.

      --
      Alison

      "It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." - Albert Einstein

    14. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1

      ...if Apple worked on iTunes for years, knew that they would call it iTunes and didn't register the trademark during the development phase, then they are dumber then a dim light bulb for a billion $ company.

      You can work on a product without having a name for it, you know. Actually, most products work this way. The development guys make it, and the marketing guys name it when it gets close to release (depending on the lead time they want).

    15. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by lousyd · · Score: 1
      it *is* registered and he does not have a legitimate use for the name.

      This really pisses me off. Who are you to say what a "legitimate" use is? If the guy isn't representing himself as Apple or Apple's iTunes, what does it matter what he wants to do with his domain name? What does it really matter to you if Apple has created traffic for this guy's website? Even if he speculated on that creation before he bought the domain name, it's still his domain name.

      Just keep your hands off my domain names please.

      --
      If aspiration is a virtue, achievement cannot be a vice.
    16. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by anonicon · · Score: 1

      If they can prove that they used the name internally before what's his name then he's screwed.

      What a complete, steaming bag of seeping horseshit. Apparently, you believe that if Apple is communicating internally about some future, unnamed project, then no one in the world has the right to register said projectname, because Golly Gee Beaver!, everyone must be privy to internal Apple communications.

      Apple waited and lost, so I think they either need to suck it up, or 'think differently' and route everything to itunes.com.

      Chuck

    17. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by anonicon · · Score: 1

      The fact that his site isn't listed in The Wayback Machine has nothing to do with robots.txt. It has everything to do with the fact his site is just a suckhole for the cyberbritain.co.uk domain. Wayback doesn't index such sites when the content is being remotely pulled.

    18. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by bfree · · Score: 1

      Complete total and utter bullshit! How many stories have been on slashdot speculating on what a company might be doing because they have registered another slew of domain names? Plenty! What insight would the world at large have received if Apple had registered 20 domains of the form iWord.com, including iTunes.com? Nothing meaningful except for Apple's penchant for the letter i. How do Apple get to claim that they have an inalienable right to a random domain name on the basis of internal discussions? They don't! If the site was for a piano tuner then I cannot imagine Apple would have even a sniff of a case (based on the apparent fact that they had no claim to the trademark prior to his registration), even still their case will be based upon his acts, Apple doesn't automatically win this one simply because he is using their name (as Apple the computer company themselves survived (for now) against Apple the record company). If you RTFA you will see that the only hope for Apple is that Nominet can strip a domain if it is misleading people into believing the domain is registered, operated, authorised or otherwise connected to Apple.

      --

      Never underestimate the dark side of the Source

    19. Re:Doesn't really matter, does it? by Trillan · · Score: 1

      If you squatted one of Microsoft's trademarks and used it to phish, I'd want them to sue your ass off.

      There are a lot of things and people in this world than Microsoft. Spammer weasels with phishing scams who squat thousands of domain names in the hopes of getting lucky are definitely on the list.

  27. Filing / First Use Date is What Really Counts by Ron+Bennett · · Score: 4, Informative

    Filing / First Use Date is What Really Counts ...

    The UK Patent Office - Trade marks - Database
    http://www.patent.gov.uk/tm/dbase/index. htm

    Filed Oct-24-2000 ... that's before Nov-07-2000 - and according to the UK Patent Office website, the database updates weekly; perhaps it didn't back then, but my guess is he knew about Apple's intended use and/or pending TM application(s).

    http://webdb4.patent.gov.uk/tm/number?detailsreq ue sted=C&trademark=2249936

    Being that he's a millionaire, Apple's TM claims appear weak (my layman's opinion based upon my own experiences in domain name speculation), and he is determined to fight, Apple may eventually choose to settle for some decent size amount ... 6-figure sum USD/GBP wouldn't surprise me.

    Ron Bennett

    1. Re:Filing / First Use Date is What Really Counts by anum · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I doubt that this domain was registered with the INTENT of squating on it and hoping for a big pay off. Those were heady days for i/e business ideas. Like most of those ideas this one didn't go anywhere. The site probably languished for a few years and then came the iPod followed by iTunes. By this point I can see someone making the decision to hold on to a worthless domain to recoup the investment and then some. Maybe even profit on the draw of iTunes to push some mechandise or service (scam? I withhold judgement).

      Summary: He may not have started out as a mean, evil, coward of a cybersquater. But as time goes by he begins to look like one.

      Tortured Analogy: He didn't know the railline was going to go in when he bought the land but when it turned out to be worthless for his original intentions he decided to hold on to it just in case.
      Now the railway company wants it to build a station on it.
      Should they be forced to pay him whatever he demands or should he be forced to hand it over by the courts. On the gripping hand, maybe he should be forced to accept a fair market value for it. Compromi(s|z)e, is it that hard?

      --
      I don't think, Therefore I'm not.
    2. Re:Filing / First Use Date is What Really Counts by The+Dodger · · Score: 2, Informative
      He's not a millionaire.

      When he was a teenager, he (with assistance from his daddy) set up a Jewish community website. This was at the height of the Internet bubble. It was speculated that the website would be worth millions and, hence, that young Cohen was a millionaire. He was a media darling for a while - lots of newspaper articles and I think there was a TV program...

      I was part of the dot-com scene back then and some of the stuff we were doing was related to communities and content management, so this guy came across our radar screen as a potential client, but the general view amongst serious players (i.e. those who were actually building a real business model, instead of just setting up a website with a catchy name) was that Cohen was basically a rich kid, his daddy was the real business brains behind it all and that, both the company (TotallyJewish or something like that) and Cohen Jr.'s talent, skills, abilities, value, intelligence, business sense (in fact just about everything apart from his father's PR skills at getting his son exposure in the media) were vastly overrated.

      The website/company in question was eventually sold for a paper value (i.e. it was a takeover and he got shares in the company that was doing the taking over) for well, well under £1m...


      D.

    3. Re:Filing / First Use Date is What Really Counts by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Well, they knew about the domain registration in 2000 (or should have though due diligence). To make a product line dependent on a name for which you do not own the common namespace is foolish.

      In your scenereo, the rail company was foolish to plan to put a train station on land they knew was owned by someone else. It happens all the time in physical space - the land next to a proposed (or existing) shopping center in anticipation that the land will become valuable. There's no right of the center owner to purchase the land from the new owner at bum-fuck-nowhere-farmland rates. (OTOH, the government is more than happy to condemn the land if yhey think they can make a buck off of new taxes. The SCOTUS will rule on a case in the upcoming term which may put eminent domain powers back to a resonable level)

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  28. Did you miss the dotcom era? by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

    There was "e" and "i" everything. Frankly I'd find it amazing if someone somewhere wasn't using iTunes before Apple finally got round to it.

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  29. Re:Go Steve by DigitumDei · · Score: 1

    You forget that if you are anti mac, or should I say, anti ipod/itunes, then you are EVIL!!!!

    This whole thread is going to be filled with posts saying "this guy is cyber squatting and should be punished" and the fact that the registration for this site preceded macs trademarking of itunes will more than likely be ignored. Hmm I think we need a Fanboy moderation option...

    That said, I bet he has seen a HUGE increase in traffic since the itunes started. And this case may cause even more traffic, so I'm guessing the owner is happy for now.

  30. Re:Go Steve by ericdano · · Score: 1
    ooo, so, like maybe he read MacRumors or something before? Oh no, I suppose he didn't huh?

    He's going to lose the name, you'll see....

    --
    It's either on the beat or off the beat, it's that easy.
    I moderate therefore I rule!
    --
  31. Probably a squatter by eliaalariel · · Score: 1

    According to Quickquid's article, Apple applied for a patent on the 27th October. If you were a desperate businessman with your ears close to the ground and you heard an Apple executive mention "ITunes", what would you do?
    If in four years the best use Cohen has for this domain name is to forward it to his advertisement coupons (which is now where it leads), I would say that Apple have some ground to get annoyed. Furthermore, although it would be difficult to prove that Cohen knew about their project when he registered the domain, he admits in the register's interview this may not be neccessary.

    All Apple need do is stress that technologically illiterate people visiting www.itunes.co.uk could conceivably be deluded into thinking that these discount links are what they are advertising. Now call me a cynic, but I think they have a point.

    1. Re:Probably a squatter by Curtman · · Score: 1

      Now call me a cynic, but I think they have a point.

      Whats that? That big corporations should always get their way? This guy is right up there with Mike Rowe in my books.

    2. Re:Probably a squatter by goatan · · Score: 1
      All Apple need do is stress that technologically illiterate people visiting www.itunes.co.uk could conceivably be deluded into thinking that these discount links are what they are advertising. Now call me a cynic, but I think they have a point.

      And all Ben has to do is point out that Apple could have bought and owned the domain Itunes.co.uk before they launched there product it would be wrong for ben to be punished for Apples mistake any court would side with Ben.

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    3. Re:Probably a squatter by boodaman · · Score: 1

      There's no requirement for someone (corporation or not) to run around the globe buying up every domain name they think they might need just in case.

      As one of the parents explained, Apple only has to prove that he's misleading legitimate consumers and site visitors with his use of their mark. When he registered the domain is irrelevant...its what he's doing with it that makes a difference. If he was discussing iTunes, had some forums there, a community (like ipodlounge.com), there'd be no problem. But that isn't what he's doing.

      See the difference?

    4. Re:Probably a squatter by goatan · · Score: 1
      As one of the parents explained, Apple only has to prove that he's misleading legitimate consumers and site visitors with his use of their mark. When he registered the domain is irrelevant...its what he's doing with it that makes a difference. If he was discussing iTunes, had some forums there, a community (like ipodlounge.com), there'd be no problem. But that isn't what he's doing.

      Under American law maybe. Under UK law (which is what counts) no, the following is from the offical FAQ If I have a registered trade mark, does that automatically entitle me to use that mark as my domain name?

      Not necessarily. Because the same mark may be registered by different proprietors for different goods or services, someone else may also have legitimately registered the mark as their domain name

      Do you see the diffrence?

      IT doesn't matter what he does with it or even when he registered all that matter is the domain is legally his.

      There's no requirement for someone (corporation or not) to run around the globe buying up every domain name they think they might need just in case.

      No but in the internet age it would be a good idea to register the domain when you know that you are going to use a name.

      if i wanted to i could tradmark iTunes for something completley diffrent from what apple's is.

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    5. Re:Probably a squatter by boodaman · · Score: 1

      I do see the difference, but you don't.

      If I use your mark to mislead consumers or site visitors, you have a case against me. It doesn't matter if I do it with a domain name, a publication, or anything else.

      The FAQ you quoted is irrelevant...I said nothing about having a trademark giving you the legal right to the domain name. As one of the parents pointed out (fsa.co.uk) you can register a domain without having a trademark and be fine. There have been other cases, such as the World Wildlife Foundation vs. the World Wrestling Federation (or whatever their names are...the dispute was over wwf.com/org/net).

      I said that you could own the domain name that uses my mark PROVIDED you don't harm my mark in the process.

      If I take your mark, register a domain name using that mark, and then proceed to DAMAGE your mark, you have a case.

      If I take your mark, register a domain name using that mark, and then proceed NOT to damage your mark, then your case is much weaker, especially if I can demonstrate that I registered the domain before you registered your mark.

      You're right, you can register iTunes for something different than the way Apple uses it...I never said different. What you cannot do is register iTunes and use it for something similar, especially if you take no steps to clearly inform the public that you aren't Apple.

      It most certainly DOES matter what he does with his domain. Whether he legally owns it or not is irrelevant...if he legally owns it and uses it to confuse consumers or harm Apple's trademark, Apple probably has a case.

      If the UK lets anyone do anything they want with trademarks with no liability, remind me not to do business in the UK. Or rather, remind me to move to the UK and use everyone's trademarks with impunity.

  32. More Corporate Bully-Boy Tactics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Basically, prefixing "i" to the name of your site could result in letters/threats/court action from Apple's lawyers in much the same way as prefixing "easy" does from Easy.

  33. Re:squat... maybe by nick+korma · · Score: 1

    I was going to post a reply to this but then decided that it was pointless... however after the third full stop changed my mind. perhaps it takes you to quickquid because your machine is infected with ad-aware and your constant searching for online £pound shops (a uk hobby where you can buy all manner of trash for you guessed it £1 ) means that your IE browser is now almost useless... or it could just be a forwarder?

  34. Re:Go Steve by InternationalCow · · Score: 1

    And if you RTFP you would have noticed that I said "IF he is convicted...". I never said he was.

    --
    ----- One learns to itch where one can scratch.
  35. Re:Go Steve by bsartist · · Score: 2, Informative

    Well, come on, this guy knew Apple was going to register it.

    Not unless he had inside information, or a crystal ball. iTunes 1.0 wasn't released until Jan 2001 - more than a year after he registered his domain.

    --
    Lost: Sig, white with black letters. No collar. Reward if found!
  36. Re:Go Steve by bsartist · · Score: 1

    D'oh! s/more than a year/several months/.

    --
    Lost: Sig, white with black letters. No collar. Reward if found!
  37. Summary Judgement by The+Dodger · · Score: 5, Insightful
    A few observations:
    • The site that iTunes.co.uk points to is called QuickQuid.com. Cohen doesn't appear to have invested anything in building a business around the iTunes name.
    • QuickQuid.com appears to be some kind of marketing/promotional business - i.e. they persuade people to sign up with them, in order to receive discounts, special offers, etc. In addition, QuickQuid.com displays adverts - presumably the more times those adverts are viewed/clicked on, the more advertising revenue QuickQuid.com receives. Hence, the more traffic to their site, the more people are likely to sign up and, hence, the more money the company will make.
    • Apple own the iTunes trademark and have invested a lot of money in building a business around that name.
    • The vast, vast majority of people who go to www.itunes.co.uk will do so in the expectation of finding the Apple iTunes service.
    Now, it seems to me that there are two reasons the itunes.co.uk domain is of value to Cohen/QuickQuid.com:
    1. It's a catchy name and would have been a good name for a company doing something related to music and the Internet. However, it appears that Cohen failed to register itunes as a trademark and, now that Apple have done so, he almost certainly can't. So, he's missed out on realising that potential.
    2. It brings traffic to the QuickQuid.com site because of people who are trying to reach Apple's iTunes service in the UK.
    In other words, the domain would have hardly any value if it wasn't for the fact that Apple have spent millions promoting iTunes. Anyone who thinks that Apple should pay a lot of money for the domain because it's "valuable" is essentially saying that Apple should have to pay for something which is only valuable because of money Apple have invested in their trademark. That doesn't seem just to me.

    By capturing traffic to itunes.co.uk, QuickQuid.com is benefitting directly from Apple's marketing of iTunes - in essence, it's a parasite on Apple's marketing budget.

    Finally, let's not forget that Apple have a duty to protect their trademark.

    So, my judgement is as follows:

    1. Cohen should hand the itunes.co.uk domain over to Apple.
    2. Apple should pay Cohen £1,500 (approx $2,500) for costs involved in transferring the domain.
    3. My fee shall be apportioned as follows: Cohen shall pay 1% (£1,000) and Apple shal pay the other 99% (£99,000).
    4. The Clerk of the Court (aka CmdrTaco) shall book me on a six-week Caribbean cruise.
    Case dismissed.


    D.
    ..is for Djudge.

    1. Re:Summary Judgement by The+Dodger · · Score: 1
      Rebuttal:
      • He didn't create a site - he still hasn't created an itunes.co.uk-branded site. It just points to QuickQuid.com
      • "CDs and Music" is one of the menu items on the page you get if you type www.itunes.co.uk into a browser.
      • Have Kodak trademarked the word "Gold"? I don't think so.
      You are hereby judged to be a complete moron. I'm holding you in contempt of court and sentencing you to a sound flogging.

      Bailiff! Remove this imbecile from my courtroom forthwith!


      D.
      ..is for Don't Piss Off The Judge!

    2. Re:Summary Judgement by radish · · Score: 1

      Counter argument. Let's say I just registered "iFelch.com" and set it up as a personals site. 2 months later, Apple launch some new fancy software, called, as it happens, iFelch. How is that my problem? How do I owe them anything? Now sure, I didn't register the trademark (if I did, I'd have been sueing right now), but that doesn't mean the domain is theirs.

      The whole point here is that itunes.co.uk was registered BEFORE iTunes was a trademark, or even before the software was launched.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    3. Re:Summary Judgement by The+Dodger · · Score: 1
      You make a half-decent point and, therefore, I won't have you flogged.

      However, your argument is rejected because this situation is different from the one you outlined - Cohen didn't set up a site branded as iTunes or do anything to create a defensible trademark (you don't have to register a trademark for it to be a trademark).

      In your example, assuming you'd branded and marketed the site as iFelch, you could claim that iFelch is your trademark (whether or not you'd registered it) and you'd probably find that Apple would probably offer you a fair price to buy the domain from you, that reflected the value of the trademark you had built up.


      D.

    4. Re:Summary Judgement by The+Dodger · · Score: 1
      We're not talking about land. We're talking about a brand, a trademark.

      A better way of looking at it from your point of view would be if WalMart announced plans to expand into a new country, and a storeowner there had a painted sign saying "WalMart".

      The storeowner waits until WalMart move in, open some stores and spend a few million on advertising, then he hangs the WalMart sign outside his shop and customers start going into his shop because they think it's the WalMart that's been advertising cheap food on the TV.

      Because he'd kept the sign in his basement until WalMart established their brand, he hasn't established a trademark and, therefore, has no right to use the name 'WalMart'.

      You should now stab yourself in the back of your left hand with the nearest sharp object as punishment for being stupid enough to contradict me.


      D.

  38. Re:Who had an iTunes domain first? (Doesn't matter by bsartist · · Score: 2

    I'll never understand all of this copyright nonsense.

    The first thing you need to understand is that this is a question of a trademark, not a copyright.

    --
    Lost: Sig, white with black letters. No collar. Reward if found!
  39. Re:He should try to get their trademark signed ove by GauteL · · Score: 4, Interesting

    iTunes was released by Apple in January 2001 and filed as a trademark in October 2000, before he registered his domain. iTunes.co.uk was registred in 1998, a long time before itunes.co.uk. It is however not clear whether it was owned by Apple before october 2000.

    Given the huge Apple rumour mill, it is not impossible that the product name was even known a few months before the launch.

    This is not clear and should be something for the lawyers. You seem to have just as much bias as Apple fans.

  40. This is disgusting on the squatter's part by Nine+Tenths+of+The+W · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's almost as bad as a computer company naming themselves after a famous record label.

    --
    Slashdot: News for Nerds, Stuff that matters only to them
    1. Re:This is disgusting on the squatter's part by The+MESMERIC · · Score: 2, Insightful

      and almost as bad as a record company naming themselves after a fruit.

    2. Re:This is disgusting on the squatter's part by Sheepdot · · Score: 1

      Yeah, or a company naming themselves after a fruit rumored to ward off dentists.

  41. Re:He should try to get their trademark signed ove by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative
    iTunes.co.uk was registred in 1998, a long time before itunes.co.uk. It is however not clear whether it was owned by Apple before october 2000.

    That sentence doesn't make sense. The DNS system isn't case sensitive. You must mean itunes.com was registered in 1998.

  42. Before Trademarks became involved by porkface · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I prefer the First Come First Serve approach of domain name registration to this concept of trademarks carrying over to new markets. Too many companies got away with pissing on the internet for too many years and then were allowed to come in several years later and lay claim to a major stake in it. This only fostered a crappy presence on their part.

    Competition will be spurred if we tell companies they have to look out for themselves in new arenas. Consumers suffer when corporations are allowed to cling to outdated paradigms too easily.

    1. Re:Before Trademarks became involved by natet · · Score: 1

      I agree. Why is it that realestate speculation is ok, but cybersquatting is not?

      --
      IANAL... But I play one on /.
  43. threats by Spezzer · · Score: 2, Funny

    Apple to Guy: "Your domain, left testicle, and right testicle. Choose any two."

  44. A nice summary by goatan · · Score: 1
    he registered the domain first, its his, LEGALLY, and there is absolutely nothing apple can do. its a farce that its even going to nominet.

    the content of the site does not matter one bit. he could have anything on it and its still his. he is breaking no british laws at all and it is British courts it will end up in.

    --
    Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

  45. Re:He should try to get their trademark signed ove by chrispycreeme · · Score: 1

    WHAT? um... I guess i just dont understand trademark law what with things happening before they happen but only after they happen first.

  46. Squatting by ajs318 · · Score: 3, Informative

    The definition of squatting {in the traditional sense} is occupying a place that someone else has vacated. Under English law, the lions share of the rights associated with land and buildings belong with the occupier, as distinct from the owner -- a throwback to feudal times no doubt, but a valid protection measure against excesses of authority by absentee landlords. "An Englishman's Home is his Castle" -- and it's your home if you live there, regardless who owns the building or the land on which it stands. {As an aside, when I was buying my house, things were moving a bit slowly and I was technically homeless for one night. I spent that night in my new place. Legally, I was a squatter; but the only person in the world who could have got myself evicted without a court order, was me!}

    The practice of "cybersquatting" originally referred to re-registering expired domain names which used to have belonged to businesses, and linking them to sites with which the former registrant probably would not wish to be associated, in the hope that the former registrant will pay you not to do it {as opposed to just launching a DoS against your new host}.

    Cohen registered the itunes.co.uk site before Apple even trademarked "iTunes" in the UK; so it's arguable that Apple are in the wrong ..... Cohen could even possibly have their trademark invalidated! However, if I were Cohen, and the judge ruled in my favour and against Apple, I'd settle for a printout of the iTunes source code ..... with this document stapled to it .....

    PS. I visited the itunes.co.uk site and it has an intrusive registration with a drop-down box for "gender" -- but only gives the options "male" and "female". Where's "other" when you need it?!

    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  47. Why Anti ben.... by goatan · · Score: 1

    Is it because of his surname? Why are the apple fan boys being hypocrites if this had been MS they would be sticking the boot in with visible pleasure.

    --
    Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    1. Re:Why Anti ben.... by nberardi · · Score: 1

      What you want people on slashdot to be non-biased?

      I totally agree with you, they have an attitude of "anything but Microsoft", much the same stance they took towards "anybody but Bush". I am starting to see a real mind set with some people, and most of it is based on a perceived hype.

  48. Re:Go Steve by Nexum · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...and the fact that the registration for this site preceded macs trademarking of itunes...

    Jesus, when will people get a clue and stop making this mistake? Mac is a product name Apple is the company.

    --

    This sig has been deprecated.
  49. apple.co.uk by bobbagum · · Score: 2, Informative

    Apple.co.uk isn't the Mac company either,

  50. Common sense by franksp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The world would a much better place if people just used common sense. I went to the site and there's no reason why it should be called 'iTunes'. As a matter of fact, it is redirected to quickquid.com. In my humble opnion, the guy should just give/sell the domain to apple, which would make a lot more sense the itunes.co.uk being the iTunes site.

    A good example of this is Kevin Karpenske, who donated the firefox.com domain to the mozilla foundation.

    1. Re:Common sense by wagemonkey · · Score: 1
      In my humble opnion, the guy should just give/sell the domain to apple
      Yeah, welcome to the brave new world, what MegaCorp wants, MegaCorp gets, all Hail to MegaCorp.
      A good example of this is Kevin Karpenske, who donated the firefox.com domain to the mozilla foundation.
      That's called choice, you may have heard of it sometime.
    2. Re:Common sense by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      * Re:Common sense (Score:0)
      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 08, @07:51AM (#11030885)
      Well, common sense like that would mean there is no need to call the Apple produce "iTunes" either, so maybe they ought to just drop the name and re-register their product as "Apple Computer Corporation Compressed Music Archive".*

      ah.. but apple couldn't really do that now could it? would put it even hotter water with apple records.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    3. Re:Common sense by franksp · · Score: 1

      Look, maybe "Common sense" is too strong. I never said the domain should go to Apple beacuse it's a mega corp and "you-don't-wanna-mess-with-the-MegaCorp" kind of thing. I'm just saying that it makes a lot more sense if the site belonged to apple. I honestly think the guy doesn't need that domain and could very well donate/sell/auction the name.

      Let's look at this from another perspective: What if www.slashdot.com didn't redirect to slashdot? do you think that would be fair? What if went to a porn site or to chiwawa lovers site? Wouldn't it make more sense if www.slashdot.com redirected to slashdot?

    4. Re:Common sense by wagemonkey · · Score: 1
      Well yes, but not if that site had already been registered and was being used by somebody else, and so what if it's being used to redirect to another site - this is just like your example.
      To me it could easily turn into a case of domain hijacking rather than cybersquatting. It's nowhere near as clear cut, but it reminds me of the problems Katie Jones had/is having with her domain. Read more on el reg.

      Why should the guy give up his domain because a large company wants it? If it was his personal web site most slashbots would probably support him (if it wasn't Apple that wanted it anyway), just because he's a small businessman should he be s.o.l.?

    5. Re:Common sense by bob+beta · · Score: 1

      A good example of this is Kevin Karpenske, who donated the firefox.com domain to the mozilla foundation.

      Okay. So Apple Computer Company should devote all their resources to Open Source development and release all the design details for their hardware products, and reorganize as a non-profit.

      Then what you say will start to make sense.

    6. Re:Common sense by franksp · · Score: 1

      I think that the problem isn't big companies versus small companies or big companies versus personal homepages. I think the question we should be asking is: why that person is using a domain called 'iTunes'? He does not mention this word anywhere and as far as I know, the 'iTunes' word is not part of his business. I'm guessing, but I'll bet that most of the people that access "itunes.co.uk" were trying to see Apple's ITunes content, not be redirected to quickquid.com.

      Again, I'm not saying Apple or anyone should take the domain by brute force or any other means for that matter, he registered first and he has the right to keep it.
      What I'm saying is, I think it would be better if a site called itunes.co.uk had iTunes related content, so maybe would be better if he did some settlement with Apple and put an warning like "If you are looking for quickquid.com please click here", as it's done in the firefox link, even though the browser from mozilla was created a lot later than Kevin Karpenske registered the domain.

  51. Meh by Bega · · Score: 1

    Parse error: parse error in /home/virtual/site9/fst/var/www/html/index.php on line 2667

    --

    THIS IS THE INTERNET. PLEASE PICK UP YOUR SERIOUS BUSINESS SUIT AT THE FRONT COUNTER.
  52. You've lost me by Peil · · Score: 1, Insightful

    What does intellectual property licensing have to do with adopting a central currency?

  53. Re:He should try to get their trademark signed ove by SegFaultCM · · Score: 2, Informative

    How do you get that it was registered in 1998? The WHOIS shows 11/7/00.

    --
    -- SegFault
    "One day, some time ago, something important happened."
  54. Surprise surprise... by Sanity · · Score: 1, Insightful
    ...I was wondering how long it would take for an Apple fanboy to try to justify this disgusting behavior.

    Firstly, Apple does not have a monopoly over all uses of the word "iTunes", if that were true then Microsoft could sue anyone that criticised Windows for trademark infringement.

    A trademark is only infringed by someone that is using the trademark to cause confusion as to the source or sponsorship of the goods involved. That is clearly not the case here.

    This is (yet another) case of a big company abusing the law to crush the little guy. The fact that it happens to be lovely cuddly Apple doesn't change that.

    (PS. I am a Mac user, but just because I like some of their products doesn't mean I must defend their every action)

    1. Re:Surprise surprise... by mopslik · · Score: 1

      Firstly, Apple does not have a monopoly over all uses of the word "iTunes", if that were true then Microsoft could sue anyone that criticised Windows for trademark infringement.

      Like this?

      Remember: right or wrong, you can sue anybody if you've got cash to feed the lawyers.

    2. Re:Surprise surprise... by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      So...redirecting users to a spam harvesting site (quickquid) isn't "cause[ing] confusion as to the source or sponsorship?"

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    3. Re:Surprise surprise... by tyrione · · Score: 1
      Great analogy there Sanity.

      The word, Windows, is a common word in the English Language. Therefore, Microsoft knows it has limitations upon Trademark Law.

      iTunes is not in the English Language and it is a concatentation of two words. Internet-Tunes. Your analogy is flawed and illogical.

      Xerox would have been a better choice to make an analogy. Xerox lost its power of Trademark with regards to photocopying because common speech took to the term, "Xerox it" and thus it diluted the Trademark. Xerox never saw the down-side and waited decades before suing Trademark infringement. They lost.

      The trademark for iTunes

      Word Mark
      ITUNES

      Goods and Services
      IC 009. US 021 023 026 036 038. G & S: Computer software for use in authoring, downloading, transmitting, receiving, editing, extracting, encoding, decoding, playing, storing and organizing audio data. FIRST USE: 20010109. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20010109

      Mark Drawing Code
      (1) TYPED DRAWING

      Serial Number
      76193469

      Filing Date
      January 9, 2001

      Current Filing Basis
      1A

      Original Filing Basis
      1A;44D

      Published for Opposition
      September 3, 2002

      Registration Number
      2653465

      Registration Date
      November 26, 2002

      Owner
      (REGISTRANT) Apple Computer, Inc. CORPORATION
      CALIFORNIA 1 Infinite Loop Cupertino CALIFORNIA
      95014

      Attorney of Record
      John C. Baum

      Priority Date
      October 24, 2000

      Type of Mark
      TRADEMARK

      Register
      PRINCIPAL-2(F)

      Live/Dead Indicator
      LIVE

  55. Re:dumbest joke ever by mo^ · · Score: 1

    i thought she was a singer

    --
    bah!*@%!
  56. Re:Go Steve by Ma�djeurtam · · Score: 1
    My own crystal ball is called whois:
    Domain Name: ITUNES.COM
    Registrar: EMARKMONITOR INC. DBA MARKMONITOR
    Whois Server: whois.markmonitor.com
    Referral URL: http://www.markmonitor.com
    Name Server: NSERVER2.APPLE.COM
    Name Server: NSERVER.APPLE.COM
    Name Server: NSERVER3.APPLE.COM
    Name Server: NSERVER4.APPLE.COM
    Status: REGISTRAR-LOCK
    Updated Date: 27-apr-2004
    Creation Date: 11-aug-1998
    Expiration Date: 10-aug-2006
    --
    Instant Karma's gonna get you, Gonna knock you right on the head (John Lennon, 1970)
  57. Copyrights are the wrong legaleze for names... by beaststwo · · Score: 1
    It seems to me that Internet namespace should be treated under Real Estate law, rather than trademark/copyright law. This changes the "Cybersquatting" argument to a "Land Speculation" argument. Domain namespace exhibits most all the scarceness attributes of land and few Copyright attributes.

    Under a Real Estate treatment, anyone could lawfully purchase an unregistered name, speculating that someone will come along later, decide that the name is useful for their purposes, and pay the going rate or walk. A name simply becomes an asset that can be sold and resold at a price the market will bear. The main difference would be that "a deal is a deal", meaning that when a registry sells a name, it's sold and not subject to litigation by others who missed the opportunity.

    What we have with copyrights and domain names seems (using a Real Estate metaphor) more like someone lawfully buys some land, then Wal-Mart comes along and sues the buyer for the land because they planned to build a store there in 5 years. It's only a form of squatting if someone occupies land (or a domain name) without purchasing it lawfully. The place this argument fails to equate to copyright law and names would be the implicit assumption that ONLY Wal-Mart could build a store on your land, limiting who could buy the land later (effectively creating a monopoly).

    The current system penalizes those who invest/speculate for the benefit of those who fail to exercise due diligence and can afford lawyers.

    1. Re:Copyrights are the wrong legaleze for names... by vsync64 · · Score: 1
      What we have with copyrights and domain names seems (using a Real Estate metaphor) more like someone lawfully buys some land, then Wal-Mart comes along and sues the buyer for the land because they planned to build a store there in 5 years. It's only a form of squatting if someone occupies land (or a domain name) without purchasing it lawfully. The place this argument fails to equate to copyright law and names would be the implicit assumption that ONLY Wal-Mart could build a store on your land, limiting who could buy the land later (effectively creating a monopoly).
      I assume by your use of hypothetical terminology that you haven't seen the abuses of eminent domain by Wal-Mart, as well as the way localities bend over backwards for them...
      --
      TO BUY A NEW CAR WOULD MAKE YOU SEXUALLY ATTRACTIVE.
    2. Re:Copyrights are the wrong legaleze for names... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Hmmm...I've never seen a locality bend over backwards for them. WalMart seems to prefer rear-entry sorts of things.

      Anyhow, there are a number of communities that have successfully resisted WalMart's intrusion.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  58. Re:He should try to get their trademark signed ove by julesh · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is not clear and should be something for the lawyers.

    The interesting thing about Nominet's dispute resolution system is that there will be no lawyers involved (unless one of the parties chooses to use a lawyer as their representative). It's an informal sit around the table and work out the problems system, decided based more on the merits of the facts as presented than on arcane rules and regulation. You can't just win by sending in a good lawyer.

    Thus Findlay Steele Associates got to keep their domain (worth seeing the disclaimer they've got on the front page!), and I see little reason Mr Cohen shouldn't keep it.

    Incidentally, is this the sex.com guy? The name sounds familiar.

  59. Blatant British Slant by Kombat · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is one of the most unabashadly biased and slanted articles I've ever read from the Register. Between the misplaced blind support of the self-described snot-nosed teen "Dotcom Millionaire" and the blatant ad hominem and non sequitur attacks on Apple ("Apple has so far refused to comment on the case. Although it is currently being investigated by the authorities for price fixing with its iTunes service, so it probably has its hands full."), I don't know how anyone can take this article seriously.

    If one can successfully pull away all the spin and red herrings, here are the facts:

    - Cohen registered "itunes.co.uk" on Nov. 7, 2000.
    - Apple published the "iTunes" trademark in the Trade Marks Journal on Dec. 6, 2000, about a month later.

    So Cohen had the site slightly before Apple trademarked the name. Seems like pretty coincidental timing. What did Cohen do with this site? He forwarded it to another online music site that he ran, with a totally different name. Why would he register a domain as obscure and nonsensical as "iTunes", but not go after the trademark itself, or market any products or services using the name? And how come the timing was so close?

    It seems clear to me that Cohen knew what Apple was doing, and saw an opportunity to profit from Apple's marketing (by deceiving web surfers into accidentally stumbling onto his own service), or extorting money from Apple.

    I hope this punk loses, and I wish the Register would grow a little backbone and show some objectivity.

    --
    Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
    1. Re:Blatant British Slant by hyphz · · Score: 1

      > It seems clear to me that Cohen knew what
      > Apple was doing, and saw an opportunity to
      > profit from Apple's marketing (by deceiving
      > web surfers into accidentally stumbling onto
      > his own service), or extorting money from
      > Apple.

      I think the real point is that if it was another tech company who had grabbed the iTunes domain, then people would still be going on about how wrong it was, but nothing would be being done about it - and/or Apple would be trying to buy the domain from the other firm rather than talk to the DNS provider.

    2. Re:Blatant British Slant by goatan · · Score: 1

      Cohen legally owns the site, there is no way for Apple to legally take over the site unless cohen agrees to sell. Apple can moan all they want but there is nothing they can do about it the site is legally his. Will you be the first to make a cse for apple's legal ownership? BTW What did Cohen do with this site? He forwarded it to another online music site that he ran, with a totally different name. Why would he register a domain as obscure and nonsensical as "iTunes", but not go after the trademark itself, or market any products or services using the name? has no relevance on wheter the site is legally his.

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    3. Re:Blatant British Slant by Dusabre · · Score: 4, Informative

      Apple filed for the trademark on 24 October 2000. This is before he filed for the domain - Nov. 7 2000.

      http://webdb4.patent.gov.uk/tm/number?detailsreq ue sted=C&trademark=2249936

      A trademark is registered as of the date of filing under 40 (3) of the UK Trademark Act.

      http://www.patent.gov.uk/tm/legal/tmact94.pdf

      Therefore from 24 October 2000 - only Apple can use the trademark in business. Date of publication is not relevant.

      The legal situation is different from that given by the slanted Register article.

    4. Re:Blatant British Slant by Kombat · · Score: 1

      Cohen legally owns the site, there is no way for Apple to legally take over the site unless cohen agrees to sell.

      You're wrong. If it can be proven that Apple registered the trademark before Cohen registered the domain, then it is an open and shut case of cybersquatting, and the domain must be surrendered to Apple.

      Consider what the logical resolution would be if a new company sprouted up and registered their trademark as "Claria", but didn't get around to registered the domain name until a week later, only to discover that I had registered it 3 days after they registered their trademark. Now, would you say "You own the website, there's nothing they can do?" Of course not, that's stupid. If a company obtains a trademark, then they get dibs on the domain name too, especially when it is a non-real word that they've coined and thus, the domain registrant could have no possible other legitimate interest in the domain.

      --
      Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
    5. Re:Blatant British Slant by goatan · · Score: 2, Informative
      You're wrong. If it can be proven that Apple registered the trademark before Cohen registered the domain, then it is an open and shut case of cybersquatting, and the domain must be surrendered to Apple.

      Sorry to piss on your parade but the offical FAQ says you are wrong.

      If I have a registered trade mark, does that automatically entitle me to use that mark as my domain name?

      Not necessarily. Because the same mark may be registered by different proprietors for different goods or services, someone else may also have legitimately registered the mark as their domain name

      What can I do if someone has registered a domain name which I think should belong to me?

      We suggest you take appropriately qualified legal advice. There are dispute resolution procedures operated, for example, by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) . And if you have a registered trade mark you may have legal remedies against someone who has registered the domain name simply for the purpose of profiting by its sale to the rightful trade mark owner.

      Ben says he doesn't want to sell if that stays as it is. There is not much Apple can do and judging by the reaction they are getting (in the news) they are damaging there reputation in the UK.
      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

  60. Apple has no forsight? by toonworld · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you ask me... ok you haven't asked me but I'll tell you anyways! Apple decided to go ahead with the marketing of service. This means they spent hundreds if not thousands of hours developping a marketing plan and registering a TM. This company has been in the computer business for decades. They have been on the internet for a long time too. They already knew how the game worked. Why didn't they register the TM and the domain as soon as they put a name to their marketing plan? Can you say "incompetence" ? I agree it's a cruddy situation and you have someone that has nothing to do with Itunes profiting from the name, but this is what occurs when people don't look 5 inches past their noses.

    --
    It's not the destination that matters, but rather the journey.
  61. I would... by Kredal · · Score: 3, Funny

    I would register itunes.co.kr, but only old people would go there.

    --
    Whoever stated that signature sizes should be limited to one hundred and twenty characters can just go ahead and kiss my
    1. Re:I would... by ka55ad · · Score: 1

      OK - I am not trying to tick anyone off (and this isn't targetted at anyone), but these Korea jokes really have to stop ...

  62. Re:Go Steve by canuck57 · · Score: 1

    In the article he registered it on 7 November 2000 and Apple registered it a month later as a trade mark on 6 December. I would have to concur with you, he likly had some good inside info here.

    But this does not mean he should loose the domain. If Apple can show this was his purpose was to infringe then he should loose the domain but the burden of such proof should be on Apple. Apple would have to show how he gained this information.

    He could have just conceived the same idea and acted on it faster in which case the domain should be his, and in fact may have a case the other way. It is possible am Apple marketing type saw this name as a new domain registration and decided to register it as a trade mark. In which case they owe this guy alot of money.

    As you stated, if Apple could settle this for $100K they would be best advised to take it. Apple could loose big if they went to court and he had evidence of Apple taking his idea.

  63. The real state of the law and trademark date by Dusabre · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I got suspicious when I read about 'publication' date in the article. IAAL so I was interested in the filing date.

    Apple filed for the trademark on 24 October 2000. This is before he filed for the domain - Nov. 7 2000.

    http://webdb4.patent.gov.uk/tm/number?detailsreq ue sted=C&trademark=2249936

    A trademark is registered as of the date of filing under 40 (3) of the UK Trademark Act.

    http://www.patent.gov.uk/tm/legal/tmact94.pdf.

    Hmm.

    Therefore from 24 October 2000 - only Apple can use the trademark in business. Date of publication is not relevant.

    The legal situation is different from that given by the slanted Register article.

    1. Re:The real state of the law and trademark date by goatan · · Score: 1
      Therefore from 24 October 2000 - only Apple can use the trademark in business. Date of publication is not relevant.

      from the offical FAQ

      the same mark may be registered by different proprietors for different goods or services.

      Judging by your web site your not a lawer in the UK which has different laws from other countries.

      First off that was a nice 404 you sent me to (check link). However from that website is was able to get the offical FAQ for Domain name VS tradmark disputes.

      If I have a registered trade mark, does that automatically entitle me to use that mark as my domain name?

      Not necessarily. Because the same mark may be registered by different proprietors for different goods or services, someone else may also have legitimately registered the mark as their domain name. Seek advice from Nominet UK , who also offer a Dispute Resolution Service

      If I have a registered domain name, does that automatically entitle me to a trade mark in the same name?

      No. Even if your domain name has been properly registered, a similar trade mark may not satisfy the basic requirements for trade mark registration, or it may be confusingly similar with someone else's earlier mark. See our page "The examination process".

      What can I do if someone has registered a domain name which I think should belong to me?

      We suggest you take appropriately qualified legal advice. There are dispute resolution procedures operated, for example, by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) . And if you have a registered trade mark you may have legal remedies against someone who has registered the domain name simply for the purpose of profiting by its sale to the rightful trade mark owner.

      info about what a trade mark is and what it covers. [hint] it doesn't entitle you to a domain name, also someone could legally trademark itunes as well so long as it was in a diffrent business[/hint]This is why in the first Apple corp Vs. Apple comp Apple corp didn't really have a leg to stand on but now that Apple have moved into music there second suit has a lot of legitamacy.

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    2. Re:The real state of the law and trademark date by rmohr02 · · Score: 1
      Therefore from 24 October 2000 - only Apple can use the trademark in business. Date of publication is not relevant.
      Hmm. Since Microsoft has a trademark on "Windows", must window contracters advertise themselves as "installers of planes of glass"? Or does it not matter since they're different fields? Of course, I'm not a lawyer, so I don't know for sure.
  64. RTFA yourself, pal by macdaddy · · Score: 1

    Apple applied for the trademark before this guy registered the domain. 2 weeks before to be precise. You should try RTFAing yourself, where A is Application.

    1. Re:RTFA yourself, pal by Lars+T. · · Score: 1
      And so they did in the UK, should anybody ask. Filing Date: 24.10.2000

      Now all Apple needs is to find the boy's pal at the UK/US Patent Office, and the case is set.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  65. Re:He should try to get their trademark signed ove by WareW01f · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Given the huge Apple rumour mill, it is not impossible that the product name was even known a few months before the launch.

    INOLB to my knowledge, this means nothing. If Apple was going to launch it, the name should have been a 'Trade Secret' before the Trademark was applied for. If a trade secret is leaked, it's not a secret any more. The whole 'dibs' mentality does not apply here. If I found out that Apple was going to release an iGlass product and I registered the trademark before them, tough for them! Now if they made it a trade secret and prove that I had access to the info and was under some agreement to keep it under wraps they could try and nail me with something.

    Personally I think this whole trademark crap is out of hand. Even more so when you have these brilliant marketing people coming up with simple schemes like put an 'i' in front of everything, or Micro$oft'$ brilliant 'Word' (at least they tried a bit with Outlook)

    Apple has some good original idea's, but not always. Note how after Apple went after eMachines for their iMac clone (which was some what of a valid case) they go on to come out with an 'eMac', again, brilliant!

    I think someone at Webster needs to claim prior art and end the madness.

  66. Common sense dictates 1st come 1st served by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    Its the simplest best way to sell stuff in demand.

    Why shouldn't domain names be any different? It someone buy's a domain name some trademark company forgot to buy, what's wrong with the market sorting it out?

    There's nothing more hypocrital that corporate types who chose to make money by exploiting markets to demand the protections of govt & institutional regulations to protect themselves from other's exploiting markets.

    Bugger Apple if they're unwilling to pay what the Yidd demands then fuck'em I say. They chose to exploit the market to make a profit then they should accept what the market deals out, IE what the Yidd demands, afterall it's his property.

  67. He's a Friggin' Squatter by catdevnull · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Have you looked at the site?

    His business name is "quickquid.com" -- he obviously got wind of Apple's TM registration and decided to squat hoping to sell/extort for big bucks. If this were a pesonal website, I'd probably be booing Apple for picking on little guys. But this site is A) Rubbish and B) not even close to anything to do with the word "iTunes"

    One poster cited that Apple registered the trademark long before this manky twit put up that aweful site. I predict that Apple will win this one.

    --

    I might know what I'm talkin' about, but then again, this is Slashdot...
  68. Everyone has a price. by Sheepdot · · Score: 1

    I never really understood why cybersquatting was illegal. I mean, yeah, it was needed for some of those "poor brick-and-mortar" companies in the 90s, but I mean, c'mon. The Internet has been at least heard of by nearly everyone in the US for the last ten years. Definitely the last five. If a company hasn't registered their domain by now, they should look at changing their name to find a domain that fits them.

    Apple's a big boy. They can buy the domain at a price. I would imagine it must be worth at least $50,000 since they are bring this to suit. It's going to cost them at least that much from here on out to settle this, no matter how reasonable the other party is at this point.

    If the guy is asking for a ludicrous amount of money for the domain, all Apple has to do is tell people what he is charging and they won't look like some coersive force, trying to take away a domain simply by labeling someone a 'squatter'.

  69. Two ways Apple can win by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Apple can score points if:

    They can convince the court the domain was already trademarked, by registration or by use, somewhere in the world prior to it coming online.

    They can convince the court that the current owner used it in any way that was likely to be confusing and did not stop when asked.

    They can convince the court he is holding the name for ransom.

    This guy's best defense is that:
    1) the name was not a trademark when it was registered
    2) he's legitimately using it for unrelated businesses and does not intend to change this in the future
    3) he's never used it on anything but unrelated businesses
    4) the domain is not for sale, not to Apple, not to anyone else

    Based on earlier comments in this thread, Apple seems likely to prevail on at least a few of these points.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  70. The chap 's Dad 's a solicitor... by Insipid+Trunculance · · Score: 1

    according to the BBC , Cohen was about to give it to Apple before he consulted his father.The Dad told him Apple didnt have a leg to stand upon and probably this case is going to be settled in the courts.

    How many of us would have folded right away because we dont have the luxury of a house hold legal advisor?

    --
    Wanted : A Signature.
    1. Re:The chap 's Dad 's a solicitor... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Well you're a BBC journalist, with a non technology degree. You don't know too much about law either.

      There are two options here

      Option 1
      1) Do some research on similar cases - it looks as if he needs to have a legimate reason for the domain name - e.g. with Mick Rowe soft. This is not the case here I think. Investigate the trademark filing date - he got the domain name suspiciously close to when Apple filed for a TM. Legally there seems to be a difference between sharing a name for legitimate reasons and passing yourself off as another larger business. You can see this from some of the comments here.

      This is hard work, 30minutes of Googling, but there's a quick alternative -

      2) Call up the little guy in the case. He'll give his side of the case. Call up the legal department of the big company and get a no comment. Write up the story as a stereotypical little guy vs. big company story, and you can be down the pub nice and early.

      So people slag off slashdot for ignoring one side of the story, and they always claim the BBC is quality journalism, but that's not the case here.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  71. iTunes.ca is next by Sophrosyne · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Prepare yourself for the next apple.slashdot story:
    Apple goes after iTunes.ca cybersquatter.
    ...just a prediction.

  72. Personal Experience by Cyberdog00 · · Score: 1

    Apple are VERY CAGY when it comes to trademarks, especially in the UK. This is because of the settlement agreement between Apple Computers and Apple Music (publishers of the Beatles) that there would be no contention between them. If there was to be contention, one or the other would have to give up the name.

    I digress.

    A few years ago, I owned a registered company name, Cyberdog Systems Ltd, in the UK. Apple were about to launch their Cyberdog document thingy, so I wrote and told them that I had prior rights to the name Cyberdog in the UK. (This is only slightly true as I didn't have a trademark, only a registered company name).

    But I wanted either some money from Apple to walk away from my company, or written guarantee from Apple that there was no conflict of interest. I didn't want THEM coming after ME later, claiming I was trading on their reputation.

    They didn't want to buy my company, but I have the letters from their legal department filed away somewhere. I was sending cheap letters by 2nd class post to their UK office, and receiving letters hand-delivered to my little house in the country.

    Shame cyberdog never took off.

    Ah, my moment of (nearly) being famous ...

    And I've just bought a shiny iMac G5 and it's gorgeous!

  73. Re:He should try to get their trademark signed ove by p0rnking · · Score: 1

    That would be "Stephen Cohen", aka the "sex.com" guy

  74. Re:Hypocrisy by goatan · · Score: 1

    Thank you moderator for proving my point.

    --
    Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

  75. A couple of months. by Cyberdog00 · · Score: 1

    That's how long it takes the Trademark Journal to be published. People then have (I think) three months to object, but the trademark becomes effective as from that date of publication unless there is an objection made.

  76. What About Expired Trademarks by Goo.cc · · Score: 1

    What if a trademarks expires and someone else then creates a domain name based on it? Could anyone complain?

  77. On deck -- itunes.ca by Titusdot+Groan · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Next on the agenda -- the squatter at itunes.ca.

    It's clear in this case because the registry was on 2003/05/01

    Come on people -- both of these guys ran out and grabbed this site and they just point to their flybynight sites. Is this really what the internet is about -- registering everything you can think of and pointing it at your piece of crap website?

    This isn't some kid registering the site to talk about his favourite music store (that only recently started working in Canada ...)

  78. Re:Go Steve by KillerDeathRobot · · Score: 1

    That's some interesting math, especially since Apple applied for the iTunes patent two weeks before the domain was registered.

    --
    Thinkin' Lincoln - a web comic of presidential proportions
  79. Re:Who had an iTunes domain first? (Doesn't matter by mapinguari · · Score: 1

    According to the Wayback Machine, itunes.com wasn't used by Apple until mid 2003.

  80. Pay Attention to Trademark Filing :: see below by tyrione · · Score: 2, Informative

    The trademark for iTunes

    Word Mark
    ITUNES

    Goods and Services
    IC 009. US 021 023 026 036 038. G & S: Computer software for use in authoring, downloading, transmitting, receiving, editing, extracting, encoding, decoding, playing, storing and organizing audio data. FIRST USE: 20010109. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20010109

    Mark Drawing Code
    (1) TYPED DRAWING

    Serial Number
    76193469

    Filing Date
    January 9, 2001

    Current Filing Basis
    1A

    Original Filing Basis
    1A;44D

    Published for Opposition
    September 3, 2002

    Registration Number
    2653465

    Registration Date
    November 26, 2002

    Owner
    (REGISTRANT) Apple Computer, Inc. CORPORATION
    CALIFORNIA 1 Infinite Loop Cupertino CALIFORNIA
    95014

    Attorney of Record
    John C. Baum

    Priority Date
    October 24, 2000

    Type of Mark
    TRADEMARK

    Register
    PRINCIPAL-2(F)

    Live/Dead Indicator
    LIVE

  81. Predicted Result: by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 1
    Apple offers him $(x) to fork it over.

    He accepts.

    Case closed. Move along.

    RS

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
  82. Re:Hypocrisy by Kredal · · Score: 1

    Nope, I'm not able to refute my own journal entries... which is why I wrote them. That's where the link takes me, by the way... maybe if you had linked it to your journal's static link, I might be able to refute it. (:

    --
    Whoever stated that signature sizes should be limited to one hundred and twenty characters can just go ahead and kiss my
  83. Re:He should try to get their trademark signed ove by megarich · · Score: 1

    If he does have a bias maybe because the headline is misleading but arent they all....

    Anyhow I'm not taking sides because I don't care one way or the other. I just want to see how this scenario plays out because it may set an interesting precedent for other similiar cases...

  84. This guy's in big iTrouble by geekee · · Score: 1

    You can't fight big companies.

    --
    Vote for Pedro
    1. Re:This guy's in big iTrouble by RealBorg · · Score: 1

      You CAN fight big companies and even WIN! For example: we have a very famous and rich person here in Austria, Dietrich Mateschitz, the inventor of the 'Red Bull' energy drink, he tried to stand above environmental protection proceedings and was sued by a little citizens' initiative and guess what: they won. Now everyone from the mayor of the villige where this project was planned up to the federal chancellor is creeping up his ass to save that project.

  85. Re:He should try to get their trademark signed ove by idsofmarch · · Score: 2, Informative

    Apple went after eMachines not because of the 'e' but because of the shape which was clearly copied from Apple's design: eMachines was trying to ride on their coattails. This case is an entirely different thing altogether, and I have to admit that this guy owns the domain, although he should put up a redirect for people looking for iTunes in the UK. I agree about Webster's, they should claim prior art on Word.

    --
    Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
  86. Re:He should try to get their trademark signed ove by aichpvee · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't just about every word in the english be public domain though? They've certainly been around long enough so the whole idea of ownership of common words is completely stupid.

    --
    The Farewell Tour II
  87. Re:Go Steve by bob+beta · · Score: 1

    Actually, NeXT is the company name, since they took over Apple when the boys at Apple proved entirely incapable of producing a robust modern Operating System.

    But the Apple name had better marketing value, and a whole pre-fab army of zealots up and running, so they stuck with that name.

  88. Those were the "i/e-years" ppl... by dark-br · · Score: 1

    Remember? 1999/2001 *everything* was i-music, e-bank, e-cards... you name it. That's *very* plausible that the guy just had an idea and got the domain, plain and simple as that.

    Besides, come on, nothing to see here, Apple should just give him a i-pods (ops, another i-something), a powerbook (to avoid another i-something) and he gives the domain. Case closed. Move along.

  89. product = domains? by Dionysus · · Score: 2

    This wouldn't be a problem if companies would just stop insisting that every product they make should have their own domain...

    What's wrong with apple.com/itunes?

    --
    Je ne parle pas francais.
  90. Re:Who had an iTunes domain first? (Doesn't matter by Marc+Slemko · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not that it is really relevant, but...

    itunes.com was owned by "Esprit Engineering Corp." until around 2003-10-13, at which time it became owned by Apple.

    Whois history courtesy of http://whois.sc/

  91. Re:INOLB by caffeineHacker · · Score: 1

    IAMEAZAEQ, but I think it stands for "Idiot Newbies Only Like Boys".

  92. wrong by geekoid · · Score: 1

    two people can have the same trademark if they are in different business.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  93. Re:Go Steve by bsartist · · Score: 1

    That's some interesting math

    It's a new kind of math - you have to stay up all night without coffee and post when you're half asleep to comprehend it. :-) (I caught the mistake and posted a correction a few minutes later, by the way.)

    --
    Lost: Sig, white with black letters. No collar. Reward if found!
  94. apple.co.uk by Xyde · · Score: 1

    Interestingly apple.co.uk also doesn't have anything to do with Apple, but it does still look at least like a legit site. The real UK Apple site is at http://www.apple.com/uk/

  95. Research by erikharrison · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So here is what a little thought and research shows.

    -ThinkSecret, the preeminent Apple rumor site, shows no sign of iTunes rumors in the months surrounding release, including when Apple filed for the trademark. Do we really think that this guy follows Apple more than these guys?

    -There is no sign that Apple has been asked by this guy to buy the domain. The squatting theory seems to hold little water in that regard

    -This guy does have a legit music service, and has a note on the front page about the domain and the conflict with apple

    -QuickQuid.com however, has only been around for a few months. CyberBritain.com the guys main website lists it as a new service.

    -The Wayback machine has no archive of the site. This may be because it didn't point anywhere prior to August.

    My view? The guy is a sleezeball, who probably registered the domain legitimately. I used to work for a small web company, and we had about half a dozen unused domain names - registered for half a dozen reasons, planned projects that never launched, etc. In 2000, it was 'i' everything. iTunes would have been a natural thought - hell APPLE registered itunes.com in '99, years before applying for a trademark, or launching the product.

    Who should get the domain is a bit more of a fuzzy question. But no doubt that this guy has less than pure intentions with the name, now that apple has a same named service.

  96. This is nothing but extortion by Edoko · · Score: 1

    The practice of looking for possible names that large companies might use, then taking those names, and registering them in various domains in the hopes that at some time in the future the large company will be forced to pay a fee to recover their name is little more than cheap and nasty extortion. Given the hundreds of domains and variations, should cyber squatters be allowed recklessly to register iTunes or any other Apple product in all of these other domains around the world, and then be allowed to extort money from Apple, or from any other company thus damaged by these actions? It is not Apple's responsibility to prevent this, but the domain name registery and also the party attempting the extortion. The penalty for this type of extortion should be a revocation of all names registered by the cyber-squatter, pursuant to a complete audit of these registered names, and a search for any other examples of extortion perpetrated in the past by the squatter, and if such past practices are found, then global and permanent revocation of all registration rights going forward.