Asian-Language Web Dispute Settled

Published: 30 March 2001 y., Friday
An arbitrator for the World Intellectual Property Organization ordered the transfer of the two-character Japanese name which corresponds to sankyo.com. The name had been registered by Zhu Jiajun, of Shantou, China. Sankyo said it had been using its name for more than 100 years, and it was well-recognized in Japan, China and the United States. It is so famous that Zhu must have been aware of it when he registered the name, the company claimed. It also pointed out that Zhu had registered the names of other Japanese pharmaceutical companies, which suggested that he was "cybersquatting" - registering names in order to sell them for a higher sum to the legitimate owner. Zhu said he had registered the name, which literally means "three together" in order to publicize an art salon which would bring together literature, music and painting. He said many other companies use the name Sankyo in their titles, so Sankyo could not claim to have exclusive rights to the name. Arbitrator Sang Jo Jong ruled that Zhu had no legitimate right to the domain name and ordered that it should be transferred to Sankyo. Domain names with characters of Asian languages like Chinese, Japanese and Korean were introduced late last year as an alternative to English. Others, including Arabic and Thai, are to be introduced soon. The move prompted Internet entrepreneurs to grab potentially valuable domain names which they hope to resell for a higher price, while companies also rushed to pre-empt speculators by seizing their names first. It costs only about $25 to register the domain names. In the English-language cyberspace world, some of the simplest names have commanded thousands, even millions of dollars in the resale market. Speculators are hoping for similar markups on the Asian characters. WIPO's arbitration system was set up in 1999 to allow those who think they have the real right to a domain to get it back without having to fight a costly legal battle or paying large sums of money.
Šaltinis: lasvegassun.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Drawing up a code of ethics for users

Malaysia Sees Foreign Hand In Net Attacks. more »

"Internet Tax" in NZ

A two-cents per minute surcharge on Internet calls. more »

Oasis for developers

Microsoft joins XML industry group. more »

Real Numbers Behind Net Profits

European Companies to Accelerate Web Spending. more »

Worm Targeting Virus Writers?

The FBI launched an investigation into the worm. more »

Cisco, Motorola Go Wireless

Combined Bosch Telecom acquisition puts tech giants into data, video market. more »

The world_s most "consumer-centric" company

Amazon.com Serves 10 Millionth Customer. more »

The largest Internet boycott

European Net Strikers Dig In. more »

A high performance dual-core microprocessor

RC "Module" Starts the Mass Production of NeuroMatrix® NM6403 DSP Processors. more »

Microsoft employee was raided by FBI last week

Are hackers working all over the software industry? more »