I think ICANN should stay out of trademark law. Sent from Yahoo! Mail for iPhone |
Hi Mike, Attached are copies of the two decisions. We'll see if the other ICDR cases follow suit, but in these two cases, it seems that a decision was made up front to not find string confusion unless the strings were identical (in which case there is no need to bring an objection) or the strings were symbolic or visual equivalents (e.g., com v. c0m, which does not exist at the top level as far as I know, or unicorn v. unicom, which again, was already placed by ICANN into a contention set). Then it appears that the somewhat tortured reasoning was applied retroactively. If this is the case, then it will literally be impossible to win a string confusion case, and I agree that the entire process is rendered completely superfluous/useless.
Andy
On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 5:07 PM, <icann@rodenbaugh.com> wrote:
Andy Abrams | Trademark Counsel Google | 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043 |