- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
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The problem with the decision is that myspace.co.uk predates the well known myspace by several years
The problem with the decision is that myspace.co.uk predates the well known myspace by several years
That is not how the DRS works though, and those are the rules.
Imagine if those rules were applied to land...
Picked up by El Reg: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/01/29/myspace_wins_domain/
I'm still shocked that this can happen in a supposedly open DRS service.
I hope they appeal
The Nominet site says it is being appealed.
http://www.nominet.org.uk/disputes/drs/decisions/decisions4001/
Yet another holiday in Barbados for Uncle Tony :mrgreen:
"This dispute resolution service decision is counter-intuitive at first
sight and serves as a warning that domain registrations are not guaranteed
and need to be secured by pro-active management as well as a clear
understanding of the dynamic nature of the industry," said Jonathan
Robinson, the chief operating officer at web services company NetNames.
Tony Willoughby has chaired 4 out of the last 5 appeals? Do they rotate the experts on appeals or does it go on experience/conflicts of interest?
Also worth a read:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/jan/31/myspace.digitalmedia?gusrc=rss&feed=media
This dispute was mentioned on BBC2's Working Lunch today.
El Reg is reporting that the appeal panel saw things in a very similar light:I think its mad that they gave the domain to myspace.com. the .co.uk was registered years before myspace was thought of so it cannot be an abusive registration. To register a domain in order to abuse a company or its traffic that company must exist at the time you register it. If i was him a would counter sue for the .com domain saying I had the name first and they are abusing me.
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