Trademarks and Domain Names:

Property Rights and Institutional Evolution in Cyberspace

A Study by Milton Mueller, Associate Professor, Syracuse University School of Information Studies.
Forthcoming in Sharon E. Gillett and Ingo Vogelsang (Eds.), Proceedings of the 26th Annual Telecommunications Policy Research Conference, Mahwah, New Jersey: LEA Publishers (1999).

Abstract

Researchers gathered facts about 121 known cases of trademark-based challenges to domain name registrations. The cases were categorized according to the type of conflict and the kind of settlement or decision that resulted. The data show that a large majority of the cases (88%) would not qualify as trademark infringement under traditional standards of case law. Only about 12% of the cases exhibited the kind of consumer confusion, intent to pass off, or dilution that would normally be considered a trademark violation. In all of the cases of passing off, trademark owners won decisive victories in court. The largest number of domain name-trademark cases (49%) arose from conflicts over the use of common names (such as “prince” or “columbia”) that legally may be used concurrently by multiple organizations or businesses. In many of these cases, courts have allowed trademark owners to take away names from other Internet users. The bias toward trademark owners has been exacerbated by dispute resolution procedures used by domain name registries, which privilege trademark rights over all other claims to the right to use a name. The paper concludes that trademark interests are expanding the scope of their property rights in cyberspace at the expense of smaller Internet users. The paper concludes by proposing changes in law and registry policies that would rectify these injustices.