IFPI Domain Dispute Likely to Go To Court 90
fgaliegue writes "Ars Technica has a follow-up on the ifpi.com domain takeover by The Pirate Bay. The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, ifpi.org, is quite unhappy that the .com is now a link to the (still not live) International Federation of Pirates Interests. The ifpi.com domain has been free as soon as March of this year, according to WebArchive. Nevertheless, the "real" IFPI wants to take it to the WIPO under the accusation of cybersquatting."
Not actually squatting (Score:3, Interesting)
Still, one shouldn't underestimate the potential for corruption in organizations like the WIPO. Especially since they have their hands in the large and varied jar of "intellectual property".
Re:Not actually squatting (Score:4, Informative)
It's not about "good use", it's about copyright and "bad faith" [icann.org].
In this case, it'd probably have to resort the part (iii), which usually is about one competitor registering another competitor's site. IE. Coca-Cola registering Pepsi.com and redirecting it to Coke.com. However, IANAL, and but they can probably convince some judge of part (iii) and (iv) below.
Re:Not actually squatting (Score:5, Interesting)
The IFPI is not a business. Pirate Bay is not its competitor. This clearly doesn't apply.
This is harder. However, the IFPI.com site has a prominent link to IFPI.org along with a disclaimer pointing out that they are not affiliated. Such disclaimers and links have, I believe, been successful in the past at protecting against claims under this term.
I think TPB have a fairly good case to keep the domain.
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Obviously they earn a lot of money from displaying ads on tpb.com
See also: http://rixstep.com/1/20060708,00.shtml [rixstep.com]
Are you stupid, or just being an ass? So the fuck what if TPB makes money? There's no link on ifpi.com to thepiratebay.org, so it clearly has no bearing on whether ifpi.com is "for profit". The profitability of their business interests are fucking irrelevant to the ifpi.com issue.
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Look again, at the bottom of the page. It is small, but it is there.
Re:Not actually squatting (Score:4, Insightful)
And who said they have to be businesses in competition? (IV) says "...intentionally attempted to attract, for commercial gain...". Last time I checked, Pirate Bay ran scads of ads, which they don't give away for free. If you're honest you understand clearly that Pirate Bay bought the domain because of its connection to IFPI.org, and a reasonable person assumes that such a connection exists and would drive traffic.
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you left out the important part:
"by creating a likelihood of confusion with the complainant's mark"
of course almost all domain names would qualify as attempting to gain traffic with their domain name choice, thats the point. pirate bay likely has no interest in those attempting to contact the ifpi.org, they do whoever want to get all the publicity possible out of the website name.
this would easily be shown simply with t
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Clause (iii) ("you have registered the domain name primarily for the purpose of disrupting the business of a competitor") said this. And that was the clause the sentence you quoted from me was rebutting.
Clause (iv), which you're quoting from there, is rebutted in an entirely separate statement.
Please address your comments to what I actually said, not a strawman version of them.
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Just about every site on the Internet today runs ads to generate revenue (that hopefully covers expenses) regardless of what their other primary goals may be. It seems reasonable to suppose that the stipulation in article IV was intended to apply to sites which are primarily used for commercial gain (i.e. an online store with shopping cart and payment processing as the primary focus of the site OR primarily promoting a
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- RG>
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Coca-Cola registering Pepsi.com and redirecting it to Coke.com.
That is EXACTLY whats wrong with ICANN, and why we should band together and set up our own FAIR DNS. FairDNS should sell domain names for whatever they think is a reasonable price and a reasonable time period with the right to renew. When ever someone requests to register a name it should be place up for auction and adverties on a central page some place for 30 days, it should be silent IE you can't see what the current bid is, highest bidder wins and pays $0.01 over the second highest offer. That should
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No, that's not a market. A market is competition. Using domain names in the manner you describe is combative, not competive.
You link to RMS's "Right to Read"; you ought to read this [southernct.edu]:
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This is not Cybersquatting (Score:5, Interesting)
First, the premise behind Cybersquatting is to obtain money or some other form of compensation. The Pirate Bay has no intention and no desire to obtain any compensation from them. While the site being made may be satirical or "nyah nyah nyah nyah nyah" in focus... it's still not cybersquatting.
Looks like someone forgot to pay for the domain, the name lapsed and somebody picked it up then gave it to Pirate Bay. And unless the law changes... Pirate Bay wins.
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Uhm, there's no law against domain cyber squatting anyway. There are, however, processes to recover .com domains -- it's happened many times before in cases like this. It's entirely likely TPB will loose the domain.
My suggestion to TPB folk is to use the domain to seriously shit on the IFPI in the mean time. IFPI know full well that's on all their old letter heads, business cards etc - embarrass the fuck out of them whilst you can.
Re:This is not Cybersquatting (Score:5, Funny)
Have you considered applying for a
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They appear to have a reasonable, though perhaps not ironclad shot at winning the dispute. If they use the site to attack another organization with the same initials, they will almost certainly lose.
The "real" IFPI? (Score:2, Funny)
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From IFPI.com (Score:2, Informative)
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I wonder if they should add "No member of International Federation of Pirates Interests' management is a registered sex offender" to that.
You know.
Just in case.
it's in use (Score:5, Insightful)
If TPB requested a legal fund to defend themselves on this issue, I'd be tossing them some coin right now. Give 'em hell.
I love it when the magic works... (Score:2, Interesting)
Now if we could just get a photograph of Mickey Mouse smoking a dube.
Ed
Re:I love it when the magic works... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Exactly like the recording industry, or at least its litigative section. The rest of it does a valuable job, hedging the risk and lowering the barrier of entry into a music career. The PirateBay, however, is just a leech cannibalising the entire organisation, starting with the useful parts and working its way onto the noxious parts.
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mickey.JPG [0catch.com]
WIPO - a unanswered question... (Score:1)
The WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) is a specialized agency of the United Nations. It is dedicated to developing a balanced and accessible international intellectual property (IP) system, which rewards creativity, stimulates innovation and contributes to economic development while safeguarding the public interest.
The IFPI is know to be a RIAA like conglomerate of the music industry. So why stealing artist's revenue streams and suing the public for ejoying music has to do with a organization namely built to promove creativity and innovation while safeguarding the public interest?
This question has some answer but the main reason behind it is to make you think.
Taking over? (Score:2)
Re:Pretty Cheesy (Score:4, Informative)
No one has "taken over" the site. It was for sale. Someone bought it, and gave it to the Pirate Bay. If they want the site so badly, perhaps they can offer to BUY IT from Pirate Bay, no?
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Correct, this would not be a good idea. See Mike Rowe Soft [wikipedia.org]
Relevant quote:
Re:Pretty Cheesy (Score:5, Insightful)
So, if you're trying to imply that The Pirate Bay hacked into their site and took it over that's just wrong. They got hold of a lapsed domain name and apparently they're using it. The fact that they torqued off the IFPI (not a pleasant bunch to begin with) is just too bad. Furthermore, it's exactly the sort of thing that The Pirate Bay would do
Besides, I think it's hysterical. And I wouldn't be too sure of the WIPO business either.
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I am not trying to imply any such thing. People can 'take over' something by many different mechanisms. Purchase, gift, inheritance, invasion, whatever. All it means is they now have ownership. You are trying to read something into my message that is not there.
Personally I think it is a very childish and immature action. It is not going to forward their cause and it will result in some adverse public
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Good cheese (Score:2)
Ironically, I will now remember ifpi.com easily, and never would have remembered anything to with pirate bay before. For me, this puts the link in my brain to reflect FSMs association of global warming with lack of pirates.
Now if they loose it, I will probably remember this article and be able to find the article and from there find the site, but isn't that sort of what good domain names are designed to help simplify?
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The domain was expired, and they snatched it up for their group.
Cyber-Squatting is when someone holds a domain for ransom or for sale who has no intention of using the domain for any purpose other than profit.
This is not going to be easy to prove. And, if the pirates lose, it will be an unlawful decision based on facism.
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What factors guide the panelists' decisions?
The panel decides the case on the base of the criteria, which are cumulative, contained in the UDRP Policy, which also contains practical examples of how a party may prove its compliance with these criteria:
i) whether the domain name is identical or confusingly similar to a trademark or service mark in which the complainant has rights;
ii) whether the respondent has any rights or legitimate interests in the domain name (for exam
It has graphics and 'coming soon' (Score:2)
If it was the default hosting page, perhaps.. But even then so what? They got it legally. If you wanted it instead and missed out, thats your tough luck.
Cut the BS PirateBay! (Score:1, Flamebait)
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Piracy might hurt creativity in some ways but also helps it in others. Bad material is more likely to get substantial/critical damage from it.
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Probably not many. Certainly not nearly enough to offset everyone who decided that modern musicianship is too risky as a career. It's also not just the people, but the labels too. They're going to be less inclined to risk capital on potential artists, especially the risky ones.
I agree with
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Maybe not many for the music industry but I had a broader scope in mind... like computer science and engineering. How many of today's top senior programmers and engineers used pirate copies of expensive software during college/univers
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The tools that these programmers/engineers were created under copyright. Those tools, since they weren't distributed free, probably wouldn't have been created, or at least not created in the same time-frame, or as com
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Well that's great for you then. Unfortunately it isn't for me or you to decide what piracy is to a copyright holder. Sometimes the system doesn't work. It usually works best (in terms of percentage of revenue gained/lost) for the big players, like Microsoft, as you said. However, most others don't have the market saturation required to make all this free publicity work. For people to actually buy their stuff,
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He has a hobbyist version for US$20, with cut down features and an agreement not to use it for commercial purposes. It's still very useful (I use it), it just doesn't work so well with large-scale projects. Yet people still want the most costly versions, so they pirate it and spread it around the web. Just one of these executables ending up in the hands of a less scrupulous company can result in the loss of up to a potential $5000 for him.
Re:Cut the BS PirateBay! (Score:4, Insightful)
The Pirate Bay and others like it are fighting a battle where the clashing ideologies are essentially based on who has a right to make how much money. The *AA believe they have the right to profit the most from music and have the system of law to back them up. The opposing group believes that this system of law squelches art and freedom and may well eventually destroy the ability of the artist to have music, movies or other art distributed in a fair manner to the masses.
Since there is a body of law in question, the issue is not so simple as just two groups arguing, the one without the legal backing must by definition break the laws in order to do what they feel is ethically right. It is immoral and unethical to follow a bad law, and they believe the laws concerning copyright are bad ones.
Radiohead and allofmp3.com make convincing arguments that the current system does in fact depress creative and free expression. The issue doesn't affect me directly since I don't purchase and don't download and rarely listen to music and don't watch movies other than the ones on broadcast TV. Still, I watch closely since flouted laws tend to get changed after a lot of squabbling, and maybe someday there will be sufficient art out there that some of it will appeal to me.
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Agreed so far. There has been certain
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No, I disagree. I believe that civil disobedience is highly immoral most of the time. This is a democracy,
You lost me there. The country I live in isn't a democracy.
you do have a voice, you can change the laws.
Ok, how could I do that?
All you need to do is convince people that this is a problem that needs fixing, and no matter how much lobbying goes on, a politician simply isn't going to get work unless they address the issue.
Look, in America, you usually get a choice between two candidates for any given office. The primaries are pretty much a joke (although this year, there may be some interesting battles since the religious right may back a completely different presidential candidate from the GOP.) In senate and house races, you sometimes don't even get a choice on the candidate, but when you do, redistricting pretty much guarantees that o
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Fair enough, it may not work for you. Consider yourself excused! :)
However, if you were in a democracy, you take more responsibility with your freedoms. It's not enough to give up on the whole thing and take matters into your own hands. Citizens of democracy aren't just handed
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I wanted to add that your views on civil disobedience, particularly the selfish nature of them, are skewed. Most people who cry "civil disobedience!" aren't enacting true civil disobedience. It's not just about breaking the law that you feel is unjust. It's about dealing with the consequences, and using the attention you get from those consequences to fuel your cause and get people on your side.
If I pirate a movie, that's not civil disobed
Who's arguing? (Score:3, Interesting)
Sancho: You have some valid points. It isn't that democracy itself is bad, but rather that the people who have the most control of the government, and the laws created by the government, are not for the most part in the control of the people supposedly represented. If you educate 10,000 people about the issue, then get their opinions, I'd be shocked to hear that most of them think the current system of content distribution is fair. If the will of the people, as determined by an educated majority were to act
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In that case, I take it all back. Thanks for enlightening me.
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Number one, people with short hours are part of a demographic, and often demographics are known to have certain tastes. If we limit music creation to just them, that's another skew on the music-creation spectrum.
Music is an interesting example, because it's fabricated and altered so much by the industry already. Lots of music sounds identical, these days. The labels take an artist who has a bit of talent and they transform them into something that's proven (by years of focus groups and seeing what sells) to make money from the masses. If an artist is lucky and gets big enough, they might be able to branch out and get more creative control. Otherwise, you're going to get lots of rehashed stuff from popular labe
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Music from labels don't just sound the same. There are a wide variety of styles and genres. Some are developed more than others, but that's based on popularity more than anything, which is good. I would much prefer music production to be skewed on popularity than anything else. The labels only reflect what people want.
I know that there are different genres, but within each genre, you've got music that almost sounds identical. You rarely get artists on labels who are able to push the envelope and put out something really fresh or new. That said, you're right--if it sells, it must be something that the people are willing to buy. I just don't think that it significantly promotes the arts to rehash the same music and lyrics over and over.
That said, I also know that there's a huge market for non-popular music. I'm no mus
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Hmm. I haven't explored each genre that the big labels have delved into, into their dark, unknown depths. Suffice to say, the big labels produce a LOT of music, and I doubt from a statistical perspective that all of it sounds the same. The more popular stuff perhaps, but all? It doesn't seem likely. Alternatively, perhaps they realise they can't compete with the indie labels on alternative music? Per
in a perfect world (Score:4, Insightful)
Just rename the org... (Score:4, Funny)
Pirate Bay should just say IFPI stands for the International Federation of the Pornographic Industry
No cybersquatting here! ;-)
Seriously though, why should anyone be allowed to run to court and file charges of cybersquatting after letting their domain lapse renewal for so many months? There should be a 60-day statute of limitations on these. No one should own an inherent RIGHT to their domain name after letting it lapse. Otherwise you're opening the door for companies and organizations to come back years after the fact and say, "Thank you, I'll take my domain back now."
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Meanwhile, piratebay should win this one, there's nothing wrong other than a stupid media company yet again.
Damn! (Score:1)
47 comments and nobody read the article ... (Score:2)
Well, 47 comments, and nobody is quoting from the article because there is no link to it - just to ars' front page.
For the linky-impaired: http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20071018-battle-brewing-between-pirate-bay-recording-industry-over-ifpi-domain-coup.html [arstechnica.com]
Just in case anyone wants to go against tradition and actually RTFA.
Cyber Squatting? (Score:2, Insightful)
And "cybersquatting" is, "The act of registering a domain name in bad faith, with the sole intent to sell that domain name to its rightful owner."
So, if Pirate Bay buys a domain that was unoccupied, and they plan to use it, then they DO NOT fall into either category...
Maybe someone should point this out befo
WIPO? (Score:1)
Easy winner? (Score:2, Funny)
I think IFPI has a good chance of winning this court battle.
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WIPO fix the results (Score:2)
Given WIPO and ICANN's definition of "bad faith" - which says that the domain cannot be used to cause confusion with the "Complainant's mark" - there's a decent chance of The Pirate Bay eventually losing control of the domain. But if Pirate Bay can fight back and prove somehow that it has no commercial interests or intent to confuse visitors with the "real" IFPI site, it might have a chance at succeeding.
"We have not done anything illegal or even immoral," Sunde told Ars. "I can't see why we shouldn't be able to keep the domain name. We're not going to bash IFPI on it, we're going to host our own IFPI on it," he said.
Given that UN WIPO clearly are a bunch of crooks that made the corrupt UDRP rules so that their customers can overreach trademarks - even though there is absolutely no infringement against them - then the Phonographic Industry have the odds stacked in their favour.
There is no other occassion wereby you can have legal proceeding taken against you - when have committed no wrong-doing or tort against the complainant.
Don't be a fooled by the propaganda; this is no 'boundary dispute' - the ifpi.com domai
Your Pirate Rights (Score:1)