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Censorship Your Rights Online

Battlebots Battles It Out: TV Show Versus IRC 206

Ender, Duke_of_URL writes: "Battlebots the TV show, has joined the ranks of Corporate bad-guys buy attempting to force out Battlebots.org, an IRC site that had registered their domain before Battlebots even filed for a trademark. As most of you know, in any dispute over domains it's the money that wins."
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Battlebots Battles It Out: TV Show Versus IRC

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  • crazy (Score:2, Funny)

    by matrix0040 ( 516176 )
    this is downright crazy .. if i start a coorporation by name slashdot tommorow then can i sue to get this site down !
    • if I start a corporation by the name Slashdot tomorrow, then can I sue to get this site down?

      No. SLASHDOT is a registered trademark [uspto.gov] of Blockstackers [blockstackers.com] (CmdrTaco's former company and parent of Everything Development Company [everydevel.com]), licensed to OSDN.

  • I watch battlebots all the time, and it's a great show, but i wouldnt have expected them to sink this low, i guess you can't rely on anyone anymore =/
    • by n3m6 ( 101260 )
      What does an IRC network has got to do anything with battlebots. Battlebots is a trademark and i think this decision was firm and accurate. I bet Battlebots.org was just rooting for some money from the original battlebots. This isn't the same when some people's names are used as URL's and have been taken away. That was downright unfair. But this is not. Its not easy to draw lines anywhere, and this isn't about the money. Its about a trademark of an organization with which its represented. Its not easy being famous when everybody wants to steal your name. With all the Bruce Perens with different real ID's its so obvious. is it not ?
      • If you followed the link it would of seen that the battlebots.org site was a site for IRC war scripts(bots) or something to that effect. More to the point, and infact the only point really is that *The guy (battlebot.ORD) registered the name before battlebots.COM ever existed* Timetravel notwithstanding there is no way on earth that battlebots.COM can get away with demanding that name back.

        Infact I'd say that battlebots.ord has EVERY right to turn around and say "Actually BITCH, you give me YOUR site and apologise and pay me $$$ and even give me some beer you corporate motherfukin' pig."

        If a court forces the .org guy to hand over his domain then that's only because the court has screwed up.

        Off topic, but has anyone thought how damn funny it would be if some old computer dude had registered the name MICROSOFT in the '60's and then came out and demanded that MS relinquished it's website & got a new name. *THAT*'d be a damn funny domain dispute.
  • by kfckernel ( 518726 ) on Sunday September 02, 2001 @01:45AM (#2244769)
    Just have the battle bot and the IRC server in a steel cage match. THAT'LL TEACH EM!
    • Another analogy (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Where the millions were overcome by a small group of powerful people. The small group of people were following the rules, but so were the small group of people out to get them. The critical point is who was making the rules. After that, all that was needed was humanities natural tendencies to look at things under the context of "If you don't do anything wrong, you have nothing to worry about."

      We do share some things with nazi Germany. The rules are being modified by a small group of well connected and wealthy people. The small group is using the rules they created to redefine right and wrong via the legal system, and is hammering the populace into line with much vigor. Despite this, much of the population clings to the conceot of "If you don't do anything wrong, you have nothing to worry about."

      Of course, we don't have the extremes of nazi Germany. The drive of the small groupo isn't to eliminate a race of people, but for the aquisition of power from the litle people. To move about without fear of the law, by currupting that law. But just people aren't being killed doesn't mean it's an acceptable environment. It's an indignity, a slap in the face. Why should we tolerate such indignity?

      Stepping back and looking over recent events, i kind of see how the Jews didn't see what was coming. No one expected the Spanish Inquisition either. What are we to expect in the coming years? The illusion that we have a say in the shaping of government is already fading, and the real law making machinery is starting to bgecome visible underneath the worn veneer of "Democratic processes". That's definitly a milestone.

      It's all okay though, until they kick down /your/ door.

      • The ultimate Irony (Score:2, Informative)

        by Schrader ( 80501 )
        The bigest irony of it all is the fact that BattleBots is NOT a big corperation. BattleBots inc was started by two competitors of the (non-telavised) Robot Wars (In San Francisco). The Orginal Robot Wars (not to be confused with the UK, which was a spin-off) was shut down by the greed of one of it's partners, Profile Records. Battlebots has done an amazing job of keeping the competition Builder Centric and not giving into the glitz of Robot Wars. Ask any competitor who has been there and they will tell you: Battlebots is for Builders, Robot Wars is for TV.

        A great history of the "death" of Robot Wars can be found here: http://www.robotcombat.com/history.html [robotcombat.com] by Jim Smentowski, builder of "Nightmare". He was first at Robot Wars '97, the last Robot Wars event. There was no Robot Wars '98 because of the legal hassels. The first BattleBots event, pre-Comedy Central, was in '99 in Long Beach. I have been to every event since '97 (except one) and I have met Trey Roski and Greg Munson, founders of BattleBots. They are great guys who really care for the sport.

        I am betting that this turns out to just be another overzellous lawyer getting the the way. Remember that in order to keep a trademark, you have to defend it.
  • nope nope (Score:5, Informative)

    by TheSHAD0W ( 258774 ) on Sunday September 02, 2001 @01:49AM (#2244779) Homepage
    Battlebots applied for their first US trademark in late 1999. They didn't receive it till October 2000, though. Check it out at http://www.uspto.gov [uspto.gov].
    • Re:nope nope (Score:2, Interesting)

      by ananke ( 8417 )
      This can be an interesting issue. From the internic records, the domain battlebots.org was registered on 2000-08-28. I agree, that battlebots [the show], made a mistake by not registering it at the same time they were applying for the trademark. This could be very interesting in court.

      domain: battlebots.org
      status: production
      origin-c: COCO-695905
      registrar: CORE-80
      created: 2000-08-28 06:52:41 UTC CORE-80
      expires: 2002-08-28 01:59:40 UTC
      • This could be very interesting in court.

        I'm not so sure about that. This could be interesting in court provided our legal system worked the way it *should*. However, as was noted previously, it's the money that wins.

        I have a feeling that this will not only be uninteresting, it will be a shutout.
    • According to the wHOIS info, battlebots.org was registered in August 2000:

      Record created: 2000-08-28 06:52:41 UTC by CORE-80

      The .com flavour was registered much before that:

      Record created on 03-Mar-1999.

      Still, CC may have bought the domain off a previous owner.

      I thought the whole purpose of having .org and .com was so that different things with the same name could be accomodated. For example, some company has my initials, but I didn't sue their pants off because they have the commercial flavour, and I got the organisation flavour domain name.

    • by cshotton ( 46965 ) on Sunday September 02, 2001 @06:25AM (#2245101) Homepage
      As TheSHADOW points out, the event, show, and initial trademark filing for "BattleBots" predates the "battlebots.org" DNS registration by over a year. Here are the actual details from the USPTO site:

      Word Mark BATTLEBOTS
      Goods and Services IC 041. US 100 101 107. G & S: entertainment in nature of competitive events featuring robots.
      FIRST USE: 19990630.
      FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 19990630
      Mark Drawing Code (1) TYPED DRAWING
      Serial Number 75681165
      Filing Date April 12, 1999
      Filed ITU FILED AS ITU
      Published for Opposition August 1, 2000

      People need to understand that priority in the DNS registration system in no way provides priority over a US Trademark filing unless you can clearly demonstrate a legitimate use and that there will be no confusion in the marketplace. IMO, this guy watched the TV show and decided it'd be a cute (though thoroughly non-original) name for his IRC service. That's misappropriation of a trademark in its simplest form.

      The domain name shouldn't be his.

      • People need to understand that priority in the DNS registration system in no way provides priority over a US Trademark filing unless you can clearly demonstrate a legitimate use and that there will be no confusion in the marketplace

        Not completely accurate. If the guy had been using the name 'in trade' prior to the use by the trademark holder then the trademark holder cannot prevent the prior use.

        But the priority is based on the filling date, not the issue date. So the fact that the trademark was filled before the domain name was registered means that the corporation wins.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        this guy watched the TV show and decided it'd be a cute (though thoroughly non-original) name for his IRC service

        Its only trademark infringement if he intended to mis-use the trademark to make a profit, and even then its not so clear - remember the windows95.com situation (before CNET absorbed and threw away what was by then winfiles.com), they won, Microsoft lost windows95.com. Its not "misappropriation" just to USE someone elses trademark at all. If it is, then we're all in trouble. How many people who own personal sites actually check first if there is some obscure company with that trademark when they register? I know I sure as hell didn't.

        Trademarks don't automatically give rights to domain names, as you seem to imply. Otherwise, I'm sure that half of sites out there are infringing on some or other corporate trademark. His site is "bot"-related.

        The other thing this is a .org, commercial entities should be on .com. Lastly, he "got there first". There is a MacDonalds plumbing service where I live .. if they had registered MacDonalds.com before the burger franchise, they would have had rights to keep it.

        This guy isn't trying to compete with BattleBots, which is important for trademark issues. His "product" is entirely unrelated to the TV show. Trademarks belong only to particular product groups, which is why its completely legal for someone to sell (for example) Linux detergent. Likewise, it would be illegal for Linus to register the trademark "Linux" under "detergents", because he would have to show he actually intends to 'trade' detergents under that name. Otherwise its trademark-squatting. If someone wants to sell furniture under the name "BattleBots", thats legal. Likewise, if someone trades ISP services (as this guy did) under the term "BattleBots", thats also perfectly legal.

        The domain name should be his.

      • That's misappropriation of a trademark in its simplest form.

        No, trademark infringement isn't quite that simple. Trademarks are associated with specific goods, in this case BattleBots are trading in "entertainment in nature of competitive events featuring robots." It is only trademark infringement if Barrett also intended to trade "entertainment in nature of competitive events featuring robots" under that name. Clearly he has not, he is trading "internet services" under that name. Under trademark law, this is completely legal. I could legally for example sell fast food under the tradename "Biap", and not only would it NOT be infringing on your "biap", but I would also have a legal right to www.biap.org and www.biap.com, had I got there first. Even if I'm not trading anything I might still have rights to those domains if I was clearly not intending to profit from them and wasn't acting in bad faith. A company called Biap doesn't automatically have rights to biap.org, certainly not under trademark laws at any rate.

        If the BattleBots TV show people have a case, its not because of a trademark issue - Barrett is clearly not attempting to hijack their profits, he is not even competing with them. He would have to actually be competing with them for it to be a trademark issue.

        Cybersquatting, maybe, but trademark misappropriation, no. I don't think its deliberate cybersqatting though, as anyone deliberately cybersquatting would not have been so stupid as to get the .org but not the much more valuable .com, it just doesn't make any sense. Cybersquatting alone has nothing to do with trademark law anyway, it is just sometimes fought using a trademark issue, since a lot of cybersquatting cases also happen to be trademark cases.

        Standardard IANAL disclaimer applies.

  • Ack! (Score:3, Funny)

    by anubis__ ( 168382 ) on Sunday September 02, 2001 @01:54AM (#2244790) Homepage
    So I wonder when Honda will recieve an e-mail from Microsoft's attorneys to "cease and desist" using the "Passport" name for their SUV.

    Actually I think the cease and desist letter to the world from MS attorneys telling them to stop using the "Passport" term will be much more interesting.
    • Your post reminds me of that scene in Sneakers when she gets the guy to say "passport". Maybe Microsoft should sue that film studio, too.
    • Wait a minute! They should sue all the governments in the world for issuing so-called passports and thus infringing thier trademark rights to the word.
      It turns out that most governments use the term 'passport' for some kind of document used for identification outside of county boudries. This use infringes on Microsoft's total ownership of the word passport and shall be discontinued at once...
    • What about Ford and the Explorer? Same vein, but I think that MS has the longer running product here...
  • There are two paths: (Score:3, Informative)

    by moogla ( 118134 ) on Sunday September 02, 2001 @01:55AM (#2244793) Homepage Journal
    1. Find someone who will fight for them pro-bono (as they have a strong case) or get someone like the EFF involved (for funding)
    2. Give up but ask for a little more than originally offered if at all possible.
    3. Not neglecting option 2, also raise a gigantic fuss about it and convince everyone on slashdot not watch that show (which amounts to about everyone who does).
    • Find someone who will fight for them pro-bono (as they have a strong case)

      There has to be a better term than "pro bono," as the term "pro bono" brings to mind the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act [everything2.com], which set a precedent to put everything first published in the U.S. on or after January 1, 1923, under perpetual copyright because Di$neyCo can just lobby for another across-the-board term extension act every 20 years.

    • by cshotton ( 46965 ) on Sunday September 02, 2001 @06:42AM (#2245116) Homepage
      Find someone who will fight for them pro-bono (as they have a strong case) or get someone like the EFF involved (for funding)

      Bull. They have no case. BattleBots was a registered trademark 16 months before this guy squatted on the domain. Even the EFF wouldn't touch this with a 10 foot pole. The guy's best hope is to get them to pay for his original domain registration, because the registrar is going to snatch that domain name away from this kid in a heartbeat.

      Blaming BattleBots for going after this squatter shows an incredible ignorance of how trademarks work. If you hold a trademark and do not vigorously defend it, you run the risk of having the mark declared generic (e.g., Kleenex, Xerox, Thermos) or reverted to the public domain.

      As a corporation, BattleBots has no choice but to defend its mark or lose it. Since it has every right, established through a date of first use that is 16 months earlier than the IRC kid, how can you fault them?

      The best thing that could come of your call for a boycott of the show is that you might get some pale, pasty nerd boys off the sofa and out into the sunlight for a change.

      • BattleBots was a registered trademark 16 months before this guy squatted on the domain.


        I'm not sure where you're getting your information, but this is quoted from the first reply to bb(tm):


        The trademark for Battlebots was not obtained by your client until October 24,
        2000. Barrett registered the domain name "battlebots.org" in August, 2000


        Also, this is what the TESS has to say about when the trademark was registered [uspto.gov]:



        Registration Number
        2397203
        Registration Date
        October 24, 2000


        NSI records show that the bb.org domain record was created on "2000-08-28 06:52:41", as a previous user has already mentioned. It would seem that Barrett registered the domain about two months before bb(tm) had their (tm).

        • Go do a TESS search for "battlebots" and look at the very earliest filing, 2397203. This was a filing by the event organizer that ran the first BattleBots contest. That organization is the predecessor of the one claiming the mark and responded to by the squatter's daddy.

          There is no way the subsequent applications would have been allowed by the USPTO unless the original filer had either assigned that mark to BattleBots, Inc. or the latter's filing clearly indicated that they were the same organization.

          So, it is quite safe to infer that the earliest filing will be the one that any judge looks at, and I'd bet it's also the one that BattleBots, Inc.'s lawyers are referencing.

  • by cosyne ( 324176 ) on Sunday September 02, 2001 @02:03AM (#2244803) Homepage
    From battlebots.com:

    Comments, Questions, Concerns?
    Let us know what's on your mind. Contact us at the following addresses:

    PRESS DESK
    press@battlebots.com [mailto]

    GENERAL FEEDBACK AND QUESTIONS
    info@battlebots.com [mailto]
    • Even better: don't email a mailbox that is probably read by a marketing/PR drone. Send an intelligent, well-thought-out email to someone at the top.

      Jason Cooper - jason@battlebots.com [mailto]
      Creative Director
      BattleBots Inc.

      Normally, I wouldn't post something like this, but the audacity (and naïveté) that comes across in Mr. Cooper's letter to Barret realley cheesed me off.
      As you will not be able to use the domain (battlebots.org) in any fashion, we recommend that you transfer it to us immediately, and BattleBots Inc. will reimburse you for the expense you incurred in registering the name.
      Excuse me? Who says he is not allowed to use it? That's for a judge or an arbiter to decide, not a marketroid.
      • Blockquoth the poster:

        That's for a judge or an arbiter to decide, not a marketroid.

        Well, lately, the Deep Pockets that control the latter seem to control all the former, too. :(


        Why do all of these things start with a cease-and-desist -- which often ends up being ignored until the actual legal proceedings -- and not a simple, polite letter? Oops, I forgot: billable hours

        • Have faith dude. Having worked in the legal system (albiet as a lowly techie) Judges can be surprisingly thoughtfull at times. Now I'm speaking from an Aust perspective, but I'd take a bet that the US is not *THAT* different (notwithstanding the whole nonsense of voting for judges)

          Microsoft where found to be bad-asses by the court, although the foot to the MS-BUM is yet to be applied as per instructions.

          Those guys are much bigger then battlebots.com
  • I have tended to be on the side of intellectual property, but this case changed my mind. This TV show, which I have never watched, is off the deep end. How can we help this guy who currently owns battlebots.org?

    I think that whomever registers a domain first should own it as long as they want to.
    • I have tended to be on the side of intellectual property, but this case changed my mind. This TV show, which I have never watched, is off the deep end. How can we help this guy who currently owns battlebots.org?


      I also generally favor intellectual property and trademark protection when warranted. I still do. But this, and other similar companies going after domains, doesn't pass the smell test in the least. There's no confusion of identity, they aren't engaged in any similar activity, type or scope of business, etc. The term 'bots' has been around long before their trademark. And bots 'battling' is also ancient terminology, in internet years. The trademarks (and there are numerous) are detailed to include the program and about any type of adjunct merchandising from computer games to bottle caps. However, there doesn't seem to be a dilutive impact if 'battlebots.org' isn't in a competing area. Also, it's usually the '.com' one goes after, claiming 'unintentional' hits to another site due to 'confusion' searching for plaintiff's site. Obviously, '.org' is usually NOT where one begins looking. They likely get hits from those actually looking for the '.org', since it's more internet related in this case potentially benefiting the plaintiff. Possibly at the detriment of the defendant, should they get 'interested' in the .com site and not follow up with checks for .org?


      I'd go after some publicity, most certainly. The Computer/Internet press? ok. But that seems like where we usually go. Mainstream press? why not. Most important? I'd be sending every piece of material to something like Daily Variety. Even an Entertainment Tonight or Access Hollywood might pick up a snipet on something nonsensical like this 'David v. Goliath' story (as long as both are produced by their owners). If you want your PR to work, make sure it's on THEIR home turf. For the disclaimer, however, IANAL, and I don't play one on TV; just get to see 30 or 40 pages of billing detail from them every month (sigh).


      Oh..and finally.. their (the .com) lawyer goes to great detail with the Lanham act. As usual, they don't quite include all the pertinent data. Including those areas where consideration may be given in regard to 'bad faith' filing for a domain name. to wit:


      (B)

      (i)
      In determining whether a person has a bad faith intent described under subparagraph (A), a court may consider factors such as, but not limited to--

      (I)
      the trademark or other intellectual property rights of the person, if any, in the domain name;

      (II)

      the extent to which the domain name consists of the legal name of the person or a name that is otherwise commonly used to identify that person;

      (III)
      the person's prior use, if any, of the domain name in connection with the bona fide offering of any goods or services;
      (IV)
      the person's bona fide noncommercial or fair use of the mark in a site accessible under the domain name;

      (V)
      the person's intent to divert consumers from the mark owner's online location to a site accessible under the domain name that could harm the goodwill represented by the mark, either for commercial gain or with the intent to tarnish or disparage the mark, by creating a likelihood of confusion as to the source, sponsorship, affiliation, or endorsement of the site;

      (VI)
      the person's offer to transfer, sell, or otherwise assign the domain name to the mark owner or any third party for financial gain without having used, or having an intent to use, the domain name in the bona fide offering of any goods or services, or the person's prior conduct indicating a pattern of such conduct;

      (VII)
      the person's provision of material and misleading false contact information when applying for the registration of the domain name, the person's intentional failure to maintain accurate contact information, or the person's prior conduct indicating a pattern of such conduct;

      (VIII)
      the person's registration or acquisition of multiple domain names which the person knows are identical or confusingly similar to marks of others that are distinctive at the time of registration of such domain names, or dilutive of famous marks of others that are famous at the time of registration of such domain names, without regard to the goods or services of the parties; and

      (IX)
      the extent to which the mark incorporated in the person's domain name registration is or is not distinctive and famous within the meaning of subsection (c)(1) of section 43 [subsec. (c)(1) of this section].
      (ii)
      Bad faith intent described under subparagraph (A) shall not be found in any case in which the court determines that the person believed and had reasonable grounds to believe that the use of the domain name was a fair use or otherwise lawful.

  • His father's letter essential said "give us 5 grand and we'll go away". All they're apparently arguing about is the price.
    Maybe if he hadn't of already caved in on the point of principle this would be worthy of discussion on slashdot.
    (Believe me... I'm against evil megaliths pushing around the little guys, but once you agree that there *is* a price worth giving up the moral high ground then you're operating on their level)
    • My father is a laywer and here is what his firm sent back:
      Oops.

      To the notable point that they have "already caved in" my answer would be that, based upon their response, the fighting 'droid company seems intent to deny the softbot company what was rightfully theirs. They got the domain first, and (IANAL disclaimer!) from the docs, I'd have to agree that it doesn't look like cybersquatting. But rather than duke it out, the softbot company is taking the sensible approach:
      "Look, you don't have a LEGAL right to our domain. You do have a LOGICAL point about the name thing, however, so let's work out an equitable arrangement to deal with the hassle we will need to go through."
      Never confuse what is legal with what is logical.

      Actually looks like the mecha guys are taking the bait. Of course, it all depends on how personally and financially important the domain name is to the softbot guy. Since he's only asking five grand, I'd have to say, not much.
    • I can't really fault the domain owner, or his lawyer father. The loss of this domain can't be all that much of a blow to his core business [theshell.com], if it would only cost him $5k. Personally, I would much rather dump a non-vital domain for just compensation, than have to live through a hellish court battle.

      Sure, it's not fair, but not everyone has time (even if money is not an issue) to deal with stuff like this.
    • At first glance, yes. It looks like they've already given up.


      But then I noticed this (check out the dates):

      > whois battlebots.net@whois.opensrs.net
      [rr-N1-tor.opensrs.net]
      Registrant:
      KiKi Internet
      10339 S. Tantau Ave.
      Cupertino, Ca 95014
      US

      Domain Name: BATTLEBOTS.NET

      Administrative Contact:
      Comito, Virginia kikiinternet@hotmail.com
      10339 S. Tantau Ave.
      Cupertino, Ca 95014
      US
      (408)252-6398


      Initially you might think this was them (theshell.com) getting battlebots.net (gee, you would have thought if battlebots.com was so desperate for domains they would have got the .net one?), however the addresses differ:

      8219 La Riviera Dr.
      Sacramento, CA 95826 USA

      What gives?

  • They were willing to PAY battlebots for every year that they could retain usage of the domain that they rightfully owned! To me this means they knew that there was no way that L&W (the retard lawyers representing comedy central) would tkae their offer.

    It's pretty sad that this happens ALL THE TIME, and this one is truly a legit reason for this poor guy owning battlebots.org, and yet they are still going to sue him. I swear I am never voting for any official that promotes anything DMCA or "big business wins with their big lawyers" crap. It is such a JOKE that the united states is becoming a place where a citizen has no rights when compared to the tax revenue machines of big business. Our founding fathers would be puking their guts out for sure.
  • Okay, so if I follow the logic behing battlebots.org going to the show battlebots, then if a company M, we'll call "Microsoft" advertised as owning a business on 123 Mapple Street in another town, can they take my humble aboad because I have the same address (minus the city name?)

    How could I conclude that? Because their argument is about confusion. Customers are going to see Maple Street, look for 123, and expect to see Microsoft. Heck, if I'm some other business, maybe they'll shop from me than from Microsoft (perish the though!).

    This sounds ubsurd, but this is exactly what's happening to the internet. Because utl's and doman names are abstract, aka not touch-and-feel types of property, and not a lot of people can really relate to (aka non-geeks), no one really cares if big businesses have there way with property that has been fairly, and from every way I see it, lawfully obtained.

    The real problem, atleast as I see it, as that you never really own your domain name. Unlike your house, which besides taxes and general upkeeping (can't be a fire hazard) is yours if you pay in full, domains are sort of licensed by the DNS (I'm a little shady on this part, but I had to pay for my domain name, year after year, so I assumed everyone does).

    F-bacher
  • Registration. (Score:2, Interesting)

    by h0rus ( 451357 )
    Hmm.

    battlebots.com:

    Registrant:
    BattleBots Inc. (BATTLEBOTS-DOM)
    701 DeLong Ave
    Unit K
    Novato, CA 94945
    US

    Record created on 03-Mar-1999

    battlebots.net:

    Registrant:
    KiKi Internet
    10339 S. Tantau Ave.
    Cupertino, Ca 95014
    US

    Record Created on 23-Aug-2000

    battlebots.org:

    Registrant Hot Networking (template COCO-695905)
    email.the.admin.contact@battlebots.org
    8219 La Riviera Dr.
    Sacramento, CA 95826 USA

    Record created: 2000-08-28 06:52:41 UTC by CORE-80
    • It said that Battlebots(.com) registered their *trademark* two months after Battlebots(.org) registered their *domain*. Who cares when Battlebots(.com) registered their domain if they didn't get the trademark before the little guy registered his domain.

      READ PEOPLE!

      -Jeff
      • It said that Battlebots(.com) registered their *trademark* two months after Battlebots(.org) registered their *domain*.

        That does not make it true. The registration was granted after the DNS registration, it was filed much earlier in 1999.

        READ PEOPLE!

        Not a bad strategy to try yourself sometime.

    • I'm relatively new to Linux. What program do I need to run to get that info?
  • The holders of battlebots.org are offering to sell the domain name to battlebots inc. for $5962 as compensation for the effort they've put into building the name of battlebots.org, potential loss of customers, etc...

    Now battlebots inc. is going to sue them. It probably cost more than $6K just to get the restraining order. It seems as if Battlebots Inc. is trying to somehow defend the right of companies who own trademarks in one industry to enforce those trademarks in other completely unrelated industries. In other words, they're being silly.

    Can they honestly believe that it makes sense to sue for a domain name when you could just buy the damn thing for $6000?
    • The holders of battlebots.org are offering to sell the domain name to battlebots inc. for $5962 as compensation for the effort they've put into building the name of battlebots.org, potential loss of customers, etc...

      They're playing with fire here. battlebots.com could convince the judge that battlebots.org were in it for the money all along, i.e. cybersquatting.

  • What this is... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Picass0 ( 147474 ) on Sunday September 02, 2001 @02:23AM (#2244840) Homepage Journal
    This may be an example of some junior attorney attempting to justify his or her retainer to Comedy Central. I'm sure CC has a small army of lawyers for defending IP concerns. But as Adobe learned recently, your overzealous laywers sometime can get you in public relation deep shit. Comedy Central may not even be aware of this exchange.
    • This may be an example of some junior attorney attempting to justify his or her retainer to Comedy Central. I'm sure CC has a small army of lawyers for defending IP concerns. But as Adobe learned recently, your overzealous laywers sometime can get you in public relation deep shit. Comedy Central may not even be aware of this exchange.

      Unlikely, not just because the creative director is issuing the correspondence. Any trademark/domain name lawyer worth their salt would have grabbed all the domains themselves in the first place.

  • I am showing the domain battlebots.org was created on August 28th of last year. And Battlebots.com was created on March 3rd of 1999. Are you sure you registered it before they had the trademark?

    Battlebots.org
    CORE Registrar: CORE-80

    Record created: 2000-08-28 06:52:41 UTC by CORE-80
    Record expires: 2002-08-28 01:59:40 UTC

    Battlebots.com
    Record last updated on 14-Mar-2001.
    Record expires on 03-Mar-2003.
    Record created on 03-Mar-1999.
  • Something's wrong.. (Score:2, Interesting)

    by kalgen ( 224492 )
    The cease and desist was sent on July 25th.

    Battlebot.org's letter is dated August 17th.

    The supposed "reply" was sent on August 9th,
    but obviously it wasn't a reply at all.

    Seems like battlebots.org is cybersquatting to me..
    • I was just going to mention this too. Between the domain registration dates and those letters' dates, something seems fishy here. Why do I think that they really didn't register this domain when they said they did...
  • To: jason@battlebots.com, webmaster@battlebots.com, postmaster@battlebots.com, munson@BATTLEBOTS.COM, comments@battlebots.com, hostmaster@M-L.NET, heather.mayer@lw.com

    Battlebots:

    I read with considerable DISGUST and ANGER about your legal hassling of the owner of the battlebots.org. This site has been in existence YEARS before your stupid TV show was ever dreamed up and filed as a trademark.

    When Mr. Lyon pointed this little factoid out to you, you nonetheless
    decided to continue this harrassment against him, and suggested that, "[we] will reimburse you for the expense you incurred in registering the
    name". Wow, how gracious and generous you people are! The only equitable solution here is to either tell your legal representatives to back the hell off, or to offer Mr. Lyon a considerable fair price to purchase his domain name from him. Either way, you deserve Mr. Lyon an apology for this harrassment.

    You people should be incredibly ashamed of yourselves for acting like
    this. You are completely, utterly worthless scum-shells of human beings.

    --- end ---
    (By the way, this posting triggered the Lameness filter for reason: "Junk character post", and I had to do a lot of editing to get it accepted. Things have gotten a little out of hand with Slash 2.2)

    • by Anonymous Coward
      I read with considerable DISGUST and ANGER about your legal hassling of the owner of the battlebots.org. This site has been in existence YEARS before your stupid TV show was ever dreamed up and filed as a trademark.

      Ok, Zippy, did they ACTUALLY teach you in SCHOOL that using lots of CAPITAL letters would make your writing more CONVINCING, or did you just figure that out for YOURSELF?

  • $6000 (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Halo- ( 175936 )
    Let me see if I got this right... The guy is willing to part with his domain for less than $6000 and BattleBot.com is fighting him? How much does it cost to hire an evil corporate lawyer? Certainly more than that.
  • As most of you know, in any dispute over domains it's the money that wins.



    Yeah, we all remember how eToys stomped the shit out of those artists types, and took away their domain.

    • And let's not forget Mr. Clegg's little problem with Gateway(tm) over gateway.com. "gateway.com" was Alan's actual revenue generating (read: rent paying) business.

      I've refused to do business with Gateway(tm) since then. And I've stopped doing business with NECX Direct now that they are owned by Gateway(tm). (All other online stores pale in comparison, but I refuse to give Gateway(tm) any of my money.)
  • To: info@battlebots.com
    CC: blyon@theshell.com

    In regards to your request for the rightful owner of BATTLEBOTS.ORG to hand over his domain name, you are gathering large amounts of negative press for your cause.

    A large segment of your target demographic are technically-inclined persons in the 18-30 age range, and this is also descriptive of the membership of website slashdot.org, which has covered your C&D request to BATTLEBOTS.ORG at:

    http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/09/02/0143 23 4&mode=nested

    Reader comments are also listed there, and this should give you some insight as to what your target demographic thinks of your heavy-handed approach.

    BATTLEBOTS.ORG was registered to its current owner in August 2000 -- two full months before your trademark was registered. Not only that, but trademarks only provide protection within the same market. For example, I could form a company called "Maytag Umbrellas", and sell umbrellas with the word "Maytag" on them, and the appliance manufacturer (and trademark holder) of the same name could do absolutely nothing about it. I could also successfully register a trademark "Maytag" for umbrellas, since umbrellas are not appliances.

    Likewise, your BATTLEBOTS is a TV show about battling robots, and his BATTLEBOTS are "bots", or programs, which are part of a worldwide text-based chat network.

    In my opinion, the best thing you could do would be to request that the current owner of BATTLEBOTS.ORG place wording on his website to the effect of "This website is not affiliated in any way with the television show BattleBots. Their website is located at www.battlebots.com." Then quietly drop the matter, and the negative press will most certainly vanish almost overnight.

    -- Alexander Burke
    Former BattleBots viewer
    Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    • You will be the only former BattleBots viewer on /.
      Most slashdotters love their TV shows too much to part with them for longer than a week.
      • Unfortunately, you have a point. Indeed, Malda himself seems to flip-flop uncontrollably between hating DVDs and going on anime DVD buying sprees. I'm sure a lot of us /.ers are like that in one way or another...
    • To: info@battlebots.com
      CC: blyon@theshell.com

      In regards to the message sent by some "Slashbot".

      Please let it be known that every person I know of, that watches BattleBots will continue to do so, without regard for this BB.com vs bb.org drama.

      I want BioHazard to come back next season, and wipe the floor with all other bots.

      Oh, and what about a dream match...
      BioHazard vs. Ziggo

      please?
  • I barely watch TV anymore anyway, and Battlebots was one of those shows I did watch. Upon hearing this and exploring into the matter, I for one will not watch that show anymore. I disdain "Money grubbing media corporate executives" (a direct quote from my email to their feedback email address) and refuse to participate anymore as a viewer. Instead I suggest that /.'ers watch junkyard wars (or any other engineering-like show) and NOT watch Battlebots. We as the consumer have the power. Let's excersize it!
  • I was starting to believe in Viacom [viacom.com], the owner of Comedy Central [comedycentral.com] and, thus, Battlebots [www.battlebots]. Though I had my doubts, at first, Viacom actually seemed to be doing non-evil things with Comedy Central.

    But, maybe I should have seen this coming. After all, Viacom owns such atrocities as MTV [viacom.com]. Even worse, in my mind, is that they also own Blockbuster [viacom.com], which is driving out mom-n-pop video stores through unfair practices with the movie studios [nandotimes.com] (Blockbuster gets the physical videos for wicked-cheap in exchange for profit sharinng with the studios). So, I guess I shouldn't have been surprised.

  • ...a bit too pessimistic? I mean yea we all saw what happened with the www.companynamesucks.com lawsuits and all, but with something blatantly obvious like this (ie: the IRC server existing before the trademark) it's hard even for big $$$ lawyers to make the judge say what they want.

    ---
  • why pay? (Score:1, Redundant)

    by nmarshall ( 33189 )
    why give them a dollar a year?
    also haven't we seen this FOO.com vs FOO.org?
    why does everyone think that they must own all domain in relation to FOO?

    me, i would let them sue. Battlebots.org, was there before Battlebots.com . That is really all that matters.

  • It was quite possibly the most boring thing I'd ever seen. Now if the bots were fully autonomous and possibly armed with, well, weapons (Flamethrowers, chainguns, napalm, etc) THAT would be interesting.


    For some reason, I can actually get in to junkyard wars, though. Wierd.

  • This is totally lame. What is the life span of a television show anyway... especially one as lame as BattleButs. I'm already bored with it... I'm ready for next years TV line up now. If you BattleBut.com'ers are reading this then my advice is how important is it that you get all of the .net .com .org .cc .tv .misc .infinity sites out there when your going to be gone soon anyway. Get a grip and start planning for your next hit TV show (and quit boring me with you hype)
  • by Anonymous Coward
    On battlebots.org he claims that he use the domain name for his ISP, and in the letters it is claimed he will loose money if he loose the domain name!

    But then why isn't the page containing any business information?

    How can he loose money by having this page display the same contents as battlebots.com instead of these letters?

    Sometimes it's the small guy trying to take advantage of the big company - I think I smell it here. He tries to make a couple of thousands hoping Battlebots will choose the easy and cheap way out.

    And why is he useing an .org domain for his personal business - wouldn't you try to find an name where the .com domain is available?

    I'm not 100% sure he is a syber-squatter - but from the information presented, it's the most likely as far as I can see.
    • Because the services he offers are not webrelated, but he still needs a domainname for his machine. It will cost him to register a new domainname, and notify all his users of the new location. More effort will go into finding all sites with references to e.g. his IRC channels, and have them change their references. _That's_ where his costs will be coming from, and I think he's put down a pretty small amount for all that effort.
    • My friend owns the domain name, damnhippie.net, and it only only has a temp webpage, like battlebots.org, because it's on the same machine as the httpd is on, and it's not web-related. damnhippie.net is a IRC network, yea it's small, but we still own the domain (I'm hosting the domain while he pays for the domain name). So not everything is WEB-RELATED.
  • Battlebots.org should countersue battlebots.com and take the domain name. If they won that might actually cut back on these types of lawsuits.
    Or not... whatever.

  • Every time a site like this is crushed by corporaet power, we see a small part of what was great about the internet disappear. Sure the IRC is filled with childish actions, and bots just add to the childishness. But those children are geeks using tools written by geeks on a network developed by geeks, and now... what was my point... oh yeah, and now some money grubbing corporation has stolen a small part of our childish geek actions in the name of "trademark". Some day we will look at the internet, remember what it was, and wonder why the only thing left is the Web with all of its redundant pop-up adds for cameras that open new adds for cameras when you close them. Yes, someday corporate stupidity and greed will leave us with nothing but constant advertisement on the internet and we will try to fight, but we will have no place to put our bots to talk to non-existant IRC servers to constantly publish "M1cR050f7 5uX" every 1.5 seconds on our favorite channel there by crippling our ability to do anything.
  • The owners of BattleBots (the event/Comedy Central show) have been in existence long before the battlebots.org domain. BattleBots was on the air on Comedy Central before the .org domain was regged, folks, so I don't think there's any doubt that this is a case of cybersquatting, and a case of patently false information in the story that should be corrected by /..

    From the USPTO Database:

    Word Mark BATTLEBOTS
    Goods and Services IC 041. US 100 101 107. G & S: entertainment in nature of competitive events featuring robots.
    Filing Date April 12, 1999


    From NSI:

    Domain Name: battlebots.org
    Record created: 2000-08-28 06:52:41

  • by phulshof ( 204513 ) <phulshof@xs4all.nl> on Sunday September 02, 2001 @03:46AM (#2244936) Homepage
    Subject: Battlebots Trademark Issue battlebots.org)
    Date: Sun, 02 Sep 2001 09:43:14 +0200
    From: Pieter Hulshoff
    To: info@battlebots.com, press@battlebots.com
    CC: blyon@theshell.com

    Dear Sir/Madam,

    As a frequent viewer of your "BattleBots" program, I am highly disappointed to have read about your dispute with Mr. Lyon over his ownership of the www.battlebots.org website. With this you have already gathered quite a bit of bad PR, as you can view at
    http://slashdot.org/yro/01/09/02/0143234.shtml.

    Since it will cost Mr. Lyon a considerable amount of time, effort and money to start a new site, and move all the services he offers to the public to this new site (making all his users aware of the new location) I sincerely hope that you will consider the two options Mr. Lyon has offered you in his email. They seem more than reasonable to me. A third option was provided by Mr. Burke in an email to you (quoted from Slashdot):
    "In my opinion, the best thing you could do would be to request that the current owner of BATTLEBOTS.ORG place wording on his website to the effect of "This website is not affiliated in any way with the television show BattleBots. Their website is located at www.battlebots.com." Then quietly drop the matter, and the negative press will most certainly vanish almost overnight. "

    I must agree with Mr. Burke that handling this matter in a friendly and acceptable manner will save you a lot of bad press. I for one will boycott this program for as long as this matter is not amicably solved.

    Regards,

    Ir. Pieter Hulshoff
    Almere, the Netherlands
  • While my pessimistic overgeneralizing side (e.g. the irritating side) would like to agree with the statement that, "in any dispute over domains it's the money that wins," my rational and much more pleasant side forces to mention a counterexample: The recent court victory of the World Wildlife Fund (a nonprofit), over the World Wrestling Federation (extremely profitable) in a domain name suit concerning the letters "WWF." While I'm much too lazy to provide any relevant URLs, I'm sure you can all find them yourselves.
  • Can they even get a valid trademark when there
    has been prior use by someone else?
    • To have a valid trademark, you need not prove it's never been used.
      The requirements are that it's not an English word, that it's not the actual name of the product, and that it's not a well-known name of something else.
      If they prove that the average person associates the name with the company they can get a trademark.
  • Why should they be interested in the .org site, when these are usually used by non-profit making organisations? I think most people trying to find a corporate website for a TV show would automatically go to the .com. Wasn't the point of having different tlds to distinguish between commercial and non-commercial sites?

  • by Electrawn ( 321224 ) <{moc.oohay} {ta} {nwartcele}> on Sunday September 02, 2001 @05:32AM (#2245054) Homepage
    I checked out the company theshell.com. It seems they offer vhosts for IRC. [theshell.com]

    Basically this "business" is an eggdrop site/ shell whore site for script kiddies. Also it's been noted in previous posts that the domain was registered AFTER battlebots.com was.
    This is no case of a corporation going after a little guy, this is a case of a script kiddie/wannabe admin/etc whining because his leet domain is trademarked.
    IRC has broken down into lame vhosts, theshell.com seems no exception.

    Before you go sending off those letters to battlebots.com...just look at this:(I'm assuming with 99% certainty he owns the entire ip block)

    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.57 to www.battlebots.org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.58 to clubslut.org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.59 to oddlyshaped.nutsack.org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.60 to fuckthenet.org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.61 to keg.drinker.net
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.62 to beer.drinker.net
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.63 to met.your.momma.at.the.clubslut.org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.64 to heavy.alcohol.drinker.net
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.65 to killall-9.battlebots.org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.66 to screwdriver.drinker.net
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.67 to irc.erisfreenetwork.net
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.68 to big.nutsack.org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.69 to two-a-day.com
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.70 to you.aint.leet.enough.to.crack.512bit.com
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.71 to my.passwd.is.512bit.com
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.72 to i.once.hacked.512bit.com
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.73 to hacked.512bit.com
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.74 to elite.512bit.com
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.75 to erisfreenetwork.net
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.76 to ircd.erisfreenetwork.net
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.77 to erdmanphoto.com
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.78 to some-day.i.will.fuckthenet.org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.79 to help.me.fuckthenet.org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.80 to fuckyourmom.fuckyoursister.fuckyourdog.fuckthenet. org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.56 to thenarrator.com
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.55 to vhosts.theshell.com
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.54 to pennstsucks.com
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.53 to emeraldbp.com
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.52 to licked.and.fondled.nutsack.org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.51 to has.a.d0pe.nutsack.org
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.50 to instinct.love.le.gs
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.49 to DONT.touch.my.le.gs
    [N] Resolved 63.236.138.48 to lezbos.like.to.lick.Britney.Spears.le.gs

    Save your battles for someone who really needs help.
    • Ack! The horror of wasted address space!

      • [whois.arin.net]
        Qwest Communications (NETBLK-NET-QWEST-BLKS2) NET-QWEST-BLKS2
        • 63.236.0.0 - 63.239.255.255
        Hot Networking (NETBLK-QWEST-63-236-138-0) QWEST-63-236-138-0
        • 63.236.138.0 - 63.236.138.255

        To single out one record, look it up with "!xxx", where xxx is the
        handle, shown in parenthesis following the name, which comes first.

        The ARIN Registration Services Host contains ONLY Internet
        Network Information: Networks, ASN's, and related POC's.
        Please use the whois server at rs.internic.net for DOMAIN related
        Information and whois.nic.mil for NIPRNET Information.
      ARIN, please, stop giving Qwest address space for them to waste in this manner. I'd like to see the justification for that.

      Here's the complete /24:
      • Searching 63.236.138...
        1: qwest-edge-02.theshell.com
        2: carbon.theshell.com
        3: radium.theshell.com
        ...
        5: arsenic.theshell.com
        6: lead.theshell.com
        7: xenon.theshell.com
        8: oxygen.theshell.com
        9: galaga.alphalinux.org
        10: alphalinux.org
        ...
        12: developer.alphalinux.org
        13: voodoo.alphalinux.org
        14: from.ms
        15: whiskey-n-port.drinker.net
        16: salt.and.peppers.net
        17: red.hot.chili.peppers.net
        18: buff.le.gs
        19: shes.got.le.gs
        20: le.gs
        21: nutsack.org
        22: shroo.ms
        23: origin.md5.org
        24: my.hash.is.md5.org
        25: i.hacked.md5.org
        26: tabasco.peppers.net
        27: hafeez.baloch.is.not.from.drinker.net
        28: come.nibble.on.my.hairy.nutsack.org
        29: eat.sum.hot.peppers.net
        30: md5.org
        31: stopdos.org
        32: passwd.md5.org
        33: suck.my.damn.nutsack.org
        34: i.hate.guys.from.ms
        35: spends.too.much.time.at.theshell.com
        36: gimme.some.of.those.shroo.ms
        37: cyprusirc.512bit.com
        38: csa-tahoe.com
        39: unf.le.gs
        40: midgets.have.small.le.gs
        41: lost.his.dick.between.your.moms.le.gs
        42: kiss.my.le.gs
        43: just.got.in.your.sisters.le.gs
        44: got.20ft.of.pure.meat.stuck.between.your.le.gs
        45: got.le.gs
        46: dachshunds.have.short.le.gs
        47: alwayz.touch.her.le.gs
        48: lezbos.like.to.lick.Britney.Spears.le.gs
        49: DONT.touch.my.le.gs
        50: instinct.love.le.gs
        51: has.a.d0pe.nutsack.org
        52: licked.and.fondled.nutsack.org
        53: emeraldbp.com
        54: pennstsucks.com
        55: vhosts.theshell.com
        56: thenarrator.com
        57: battlebots.org
        58: clubslut.org
        59: oddlyshaped.nutsack.org
        60: fuckthenet.org
        61: keg.drinker.net
        62: beer.drinker.net
        63: met.your.momma.at.the.clubslut.org
        64: heavy.alcohol.drinker.net
        65: killall-9.battlebots.org
        66: screwdriver.drinker.net
        67: irc.erisfreenetwork.net
        68: big.nutsack.org
        69: two-a-day.com
        70: you.aint.leet.enough.to.crack.512bit.com
        71: my.passwd.is.512bit.com
        72: i.once.hacked.512bit.com
        73: hacked.512bit.com
        74: elite.512bit.com
        75: erisfreenetwork.net
        76: ircd.erisfreenetwork.net
        77: erdmanphoto.com
        78: some-day.i.will.fuckthenet.org
        79: help.me.fuckthenet.org
        80: fuckyourmom.fuckyoursister.fuckyourdog.fuckthenet. org
        81: fuckthesystem.fucktheman.fuckthenet.org
        82: dot.efnetwarez.org
        83: sonya.likes.to.give.blowjobs.at.clubslut.org
        ...
        85: bondanzaproductions.com
        86: sunder.theshell.com
        87: telekinesis.theshell.com
        88: drinker.net
        89: 512bit.com
        90: smoke.weed.eat.shroo.ms
        91: is.tripping.on.these.shroo.ms
        92: caps.and.stems.its.all.good.with.blue.shroo.ms
        93: seven-of-nine.and.me.like.hot.sex.on.shroo.ms
        ...
        124: pepsi.drinker.net
        125: cum.drinker.net
        126: blood.drinker.net
        127: coke.drinker.net
        128: absolut.drinker.net
        129: coffee.drinker.net
        130: is.a.smoker.and.a.drinker.net
        131: chronic.drinker.net
        132: terminal.drinker.net
        133: urine.drinker.net
        134: snapple.drinker.net
        135: vodka.and.redbull.drinker.net
        136: stoned.drinker.net
        137: sierra.nevada.drinker.net
        138: powertech.drinker.net
        139: margarita.drinker.net
        140: is.not.a.drinker.net
        141: is.a.two-fisted.drinker.net
        142: fuck.the.bitches.and.drink.vodka.at.drinker.net
        143: bud.drinker.net
        ...
        177: fud.from.ms
        178: i.dont.use.software.from.ms
        179: i.hate.fud.from.ms
        ...
        181: has.blessed.theshell.com
        ...
        185: has.a.big.nutsack.org
        ...
        187: marijuana.crack.crank.speed.lsd.cocaine.crystal-me th.shroo.ms
        188: loves.his.account.at.theshell.com
        ...
        190: get.your.shells.at.theshell.com
        191: lick.my.theshell.com
        192: always.gets.his.shells.from.theshell.com
        ...
        195: really.likes.shroo.ms
        196: i.like.shroo.ms
        197: does.everything.possible.between.your.girlfriends. le.gs
        198: shaved.nutsack.org
        199: envy.the.size.of.my.nutsack.org
        200: bill.gates.has.a.small.nutsack.org
        201: playin.wif.muh.nutsack.org
        202: lick.my.nutsack.org
        203: bill.gates.dont.like.girlies.net
        204: bill.gates.has.no.girlies.net
        205: lemme.rub.your.le.gs
        206: quit.staring.at.my.sexy.le.gs
        207: your.mom.needs.to.shave.her.le.gs
        ...
        211: crack-this.rsa.512bit.com
        ...
        222: synergy.theshell.com
        ...
        224: nobody.had.best.take.away.my.dr.peppers.net
        225: hot.peppers.net
        ...
        227: peppers.net
        228: killed.employees.from.ms
        229: is.from.ms
        230: is.a.reject.from.ms
        231: hates.people.from.ms
        232: hates.employees.from.ms
        233: everything.is.overpriced.from.ms
        234: doesnt.trust.anything.from.ms
        235: rls-GW-100MB.theshell.com
        ...
        237: tcm.erisfreenetwork.net
        238: lag.and.down.servers.on.erisfreenetwork.net
        239: user1.on.erisfreenetwork.net
        240: politics.suck.on.erisfreenetwork.net
        241: encrypted.md5.org
        242: I.fuckthenet.org
        243: 3.le.gs
        244: girl.liquor.beer.drinker.net
        245: IRCop.erisfreenetwork.net
        246: IPv8.512bit.com
        247: my.girlfriend.loves.my.nutsack.org
        ...
        249: stole.cc.from.ms
        250: coder.md5.org
        251: bigfig.net
        252: tequila.theshell.com
        253: inspiron.theshell.com
  • How can you sleep comfortably at night when you deliberately stamp to death the ant that minds its own business? Reminds me of an old game I once tried, "In pursuit of Greed". It sucks to see such nonsense everyday. People are so full of it. So much for co-existance. Why does Stephen Hawking need to give a damn about co-existing with AI when two brains core dump when run simultaneously on the same processor!

    Uhhh... keep at it people.
  • Advice. (Score:2, Insightful)

    by matek ( 101962 )

    Hello citizens of United States Of America.

    This kind of thing could never be justified here in Europe (or at least in Denmark where I live). We even had a case once, where some young people bought Jolt.DK, and Jolt Cola claimed the domain name. You know what ? Jolt Cola (r) lost BIG time.

    Apparently what you need is an organization that would protect single small business/consumer from the big corporations. It really pisses me off everytime I see some poor individual being screwed by a big company - and that's when I realize - I'm SO happy to be living where I am now..
  • by Ikari Gendou ( 93109 ) on Sunday September 02, 2001 @07:05AM (#2245132)
    Just add a little line saying "We are NOT affiliated with Comedy Central's Battlebots. The Battlebots official website can be found here."
    Battlebots.com will get their hits from people mistakenly typing in battlebots.org, and everyone can get along! If people would just take a moment and do that simple thing if they have a domain that might get accidental hits, we might not have these problems.

    Yes, I know. Wishful thinking..

    • Just add a little line saying "We are NOT affiliated with Comedy Central's Battlebots. The Battlebots official website can be found here." Battlebots.com will get their hits from people mistakenly typing in battlebots.org, and everyone can get along!

      As I understand, this was one of the two things he proposed in his response. The other was giving them the name for just under $6000 (losses expected from not having the name)... which may be a lot of money to you and me, but really that's pocket change for a TV studio.

      Perhaps he really is offering a "bona fide Internet bots service". You wouldn't know it from the web page, of which every single word seems to be about the domain name dispute.

  • Don't boycott Battlebots - watch it, and boycott those companies that advertise on it. And tell those companies that you're doing so too.
  • This is really nuts!, I think he should avoid confrontation since he has no money, give them the domain, and when everything is transfered, we post a new slashdot story and tell them how we feel about it, while giving them a nice slashdot effect.

    This is democratic, mature, LEGAL and will surely piss them off, especially if everyone takes the time to write their concerns about their actions.

    I can't beleive they went after a .ORG... ORG!!!! with lawyers like that... how low can you go..
  • battlebots.com (Score:4, Informative)

    by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Sunday September 02, 2001 @10:32AM (#2245358) Homepage
    They already have www.battlebots.com!!! [battlebots.com] This makes sense, because they are not a dot org! This is only happening because there are some lawyers who have way too much time on their hands.

    I am a battlebots fan, and I am going to compose an email to comedy central alerting them that the "geek" fan base they count on is the same group that will abandon them if they pull this stuff. I suggest you all do the same.

    [battlebots.com]
    www.battlebots.com contact page
    Comedy Central Battlebots page [comedycentral.com] (they have a message board)
  • [root@initialized /]# whois battlebots.org@whois.corenic.net
    [whois.corenic.net]
    Registrant Hot Networking (template COCO-695905)
    email.the.admin.contact@battlebots.org
    8219 La Riviera Dr.
    Sacramento, CA 95826 USA

    Domain Name: battlebots.org
    Status: production

    Admin Contact:
    Barrett Lyon (COCO-565137) blyon@theshell.com
    9163878649
    Technical Contact:
    Hot Networking Hostmaster (COCO-565138) support@theshell.com
    9163878649

    CORE Registrar: CORE-80

    Record created: 2000-08-28 06:52:41 UTC by CORE-80
    Record expires: 2002-08-28 01:59:40 UTC

    Domain servers in listed order:

    ns1.theshell.com
    ns2.theshell.com
    ns1.qwest.net

    Database last updated on 2001-09-02 18:26:39 UTC
    [root@initialized /]#

    --

    The record was created August 28, 2000. Battlebots came on the air before then. They very well could be cybersquatting. Then again, battlebots.org may have transferred registrars.

    They could prove they aren't cybersquatting by showing a valid proof of purchase of the domain dated before Battlebots went into production. Just an idea...
  • As most of you know, in any dispute over domains it's the money that wins.

    Er...not always:

    Of course, Sting seems to have gotten his way eventually, as sting.com is now his site.

"If it ain't broke, don't fix it." - Bert Lantz

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