Cybersquatting Cases Update: Court Ruling in BME.com Cybersquatting Case Highlights Important Factors for Determining Whether a Defendant’s Conduct Constitutes Cybersquatting

In a decision handed down yesterday, July 26, 2010, by District Judge Philip M. Pro, of the U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada, some very important factors from cybersquatting case law were re-iterated. Judge Pro denied Plaintiff Gregory Ricks’ motion for summary judgment and denied Defendant BMEZINE.com, LLC’s cross-motion for summary judgment in the ongoing cybersquatting lawsuit over control of the profitable three-letter domain name BME.com.cybersquatting domain name dispute trademark

Before ordering that the parties have 30 days to file the proposed joint pretrial order, Judge Pro enumerated some very important determining factors and conclusions regarding the current anti-cybersquatting laws. Those points were first posted in an article on DomainNameWire.com but have been re-produced below;

"1. The court held that a re-registration of a domain name is a “registration” for the purposes of the Anti-Cybersquatting Protection Act. In other words, if you registered a domain in 2000 and “re-registered” it (i.e. renewed) in 2004, both dates are relevant. A domain could be registered in good faith, but renewed in bad faith.

"The Act provides no exception for re-registrations by the same owner. Any registration thus may bring the registrant within the statute’s purview. Congressional intent would be undermined by Ricks’ proposed interpretation. If a domain name was registered in good faith originally, but thereafter re-registered in bad faith, the cybersquatter would escape liability, a result not supportable by the statutory scheme."

2. The court re-iterates that a domain name privacy service can be held liable for cybersquatting. As I’ve noted before, providing a whois privacy service isn’t free.

3. The court said that to successfully argue reverse domain name hijacking, you must show that your use of the domain name was not unlawful under ACPA — not the Lanham Act in general.

4. The court found that you are at least partially responsible for the content of your parked domain names since you can have some control over it."

(it is important to note that these factors are used to assess cybersquatting claims under the U.S. case law and the Anti-cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (ACPA). A similar claim against cybersquatting can be brought worldwide through a UDRP arbitration proceeding but the factors enumerated above may not carry the same weight or may not be a contributing factor at all)

(Update 1) BME.com now redirects to BMEZINE.com. This is interesting because the opinion denying both parties summary judgment motions was handed down only yesterday and Judge Pro suggested that both parties engage in filing a joint pretrial order. My guess is that Gregory Ricks (former owner of BME.com) transferred his rights over to BMEZINE.com in a bid to demonstrate ‘good faith’ in registering and use of BME.com to the courts. The redirected BME.com (now to BMEZINE.com) boasts that BMEZINE.com is “Body Modification Ezine, The Biggest and Best Tattoo, Piercing and Body Modification Site.”

(NOTE- Update 2) – Gregory Ricks did not voluntarily transfer ownership of rights to BME.com over to BMEZINE.com. Quoting the comment from Mark Randazza who the attorney for BME in this matter;

"The domain name was transferred to BME in WIPO case D2008-0882. http://www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/decisions/html/2008/d2008-0882.html

After that, Mr. Ricks filed in federal court to overturn the outcome of the arbitration decision.

However, to stay the implementation of the decision, he had to file in the Southern District of Florida. For some bizarre and unexplained reason, he chose to file it in the District of Nevada. Since he did not file in the "mutual jurisdiction", the arbitration decision was implemented and the domain was turned over to BME."

 

The full PDF of the ruling can be found here courtesy of DomainNameWire – Gregory Ricks v. BMEZINE.com, LLC

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Enrico Schaefer

As a founding partner of Traverse Legal, PLC, he has more than thirty years of experience as an attorney for both established companies and emerging start-ups. His extensive experience includes navigating technology law matters and complex litigation throughout the United States.

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This page has been written, edited, and reviewed by a team of legal writers following our comprehensive editorial guidelines. This page was approved by attorney Enrico Schaefer, who has more than 20 years of legal experience as a practicing Business, IP, and Technology Law litigation attorney.