Hi folks, As a preliminary matter, either the list of domains exists somewhere, or it doesn't. If it's a publicly available list (or could be obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request, or finding a document in a court's docket), then we could look at it to see how usable it is. So, I posted to the list in the hopes that someone here might have access to it, and could share. It was unclear, as noted in the TechDirt article, as to whether these were merely "copyright infringing", or whether they were in fact TM infringing. If the latter, then it could be of great use to our work. Being able to see the list, we would be able to make that determination relatively rapidly. A list of 1 million domains can be analyzed at different levels. e.g. which TLDs were involved? Or, maybe mostly 1 cent domains bought at a promo? Or maybe many were free .tk domains? Patterns can be determined by looking at the data. Most folks who have pursued expiring domain names in the daily "drops" are quite used to reviewing lists of domain names containing 100,000 or more domains PER DAY (e.g. I used to do this, albeit more than 10 years ago, when the quality of expiring domains was much higher than today). 1 million isn't a huge number. One can use text search, for example, to find matches for "Google" or "Verizon", "Chanel", "Disney", "Amazon" or other famous brands, if they were TM infringing domains. [the Alexa list of top 1 million sites is something I occasionally search on my desktop PC, and I can find matches in under a second for various terms, using a text editor] ICANN RPMs are meant to complement other means of enforcing rights (courts, etc.). The justification for some of these RPMs is that they'd provide lower-cost remedies, more efficient procedures, etc. compared to the courts. If it turns out that there's a "free" option (ICE) that is as effective or more effective than ICANN RPMs, that would certainly be an important thing to note, because, in Mitch's words "RPMs don't operate in a a vacuum." Anyhow, without seeing the data, it's too early to conclude that it's of no value. So, if someone has it and can share it, please do so. It can be debated later whether or not it's helpful or not, as some of us independently dive into it. Sincerely, George Kirikos 416-588-0269 http://www.leap.com/ On Wed, Jan 2, 2019 at 2:02 PM Mitch Stoltz <mitch@eff.org> wrote:
I disagree—more information about these seizures could absolutely inform our work. It would be useful to know what percentage of those million-plus domain names were seized for reasons relating to trademark infringement in the domain name itself versus some objectionable content in the website, and whether the claims actually relate to trademark or copyright. Knowing whether ICE seizures are in fact addressing some of the same conduct as the ICANN RPMs, and what if any due process is being afforded, will provide an important basis of comparison, because the RPMs don't operate in a vacuum.
Mitch Stoltz Senior Staff Attorney, EFF | 415-436-9333 x142 https://www.eff.org/donate | https://act.eff.org/
On 1/2/19 9:58 AM, Jonathan Frost via GNSO-RPM-WG wrote:
I think Phil has a good point here. Without a meaningful way to distinguish why exactly each domain was seized, the data would not be very useful beyond the mere knowledge that local governments are enforcing local IP laws.
Jonathan
On Wed, Jan 2, 2019 at 12:47 PM Corwin, Philip via GNSO-RPM-WG <gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org> wrote:
Aside from the daunting challenge of analyzing a list of more than one million domain names, if such a list could be assembled I'm not sure it could inform our work in any meaningful way.
The new gTLD RPMs are focused on preventing and responding to a very narrow type of trademark infringement -- cybersquatting where the domain name is identical or confusingly similar to a trademark, where the registrant has no legitimate interest in the DN and the domain is being used in bad faith to infringe trademark.
While some of the seized domains referenced in the ICE press release may have met that test, many (likely the majority) probably did not, as the release makes clear that the primary focus was not the domain name but the sale/distribution of counterfeit goods and copyright-infringing material --
More than 1 million copyright-infringing website domain names selling counterfeit automotive parts, electrical components, personal care items and other fake goods were criminally and civilly seized in the past year through the combined efforts of law- enforcement agencies across the world, high-profile industry representatives and anti-counterfeiting associations... The IPR Center, which stands at the forefront of the U.S. government's response to IP theft, worked directly with key international law- enforcement authorities and industry organizations representing the electronics sector, luxury brand-name designers, film and entertainment and several entities specializing in apparel and accessories through the major enforcement effort.... Investigations led by HSI resulted in the removal of copyright-infringing websites that sold counterfeit airbags and integrated sensors, both co mmodities that present a potential safety hazard. An investigation based in Louisiana led to the seizure of five website domain names - including Chinaseatbelt.com; Airbagpart.com; Chinasafetybelt.com; Fareurope.com; and Far-europe.com - involved in the sale of fake automotive parts. A joint case between HSI and Department of Defense investigative agencies resulted in the removal of PRBlogics.com, a copyright-infringing website offering counterfeit integrated sensors.
So the ICANN RPMs are focused on the "apples" of a very specific and narrow type of TM infringement that looks at domain content for evidence of bad faith use, while the government domain seizures do not focus on the domain name but the "oranges" use of the website to distribute counterfeit goods or infringed copyrighted content.
Aside from that, assembling the domain names would likely be impossible, given that the release makes clear that the million-plus seizures is a cumulative annual tally based on actions taken by law enforcement agencies around the world.
Finally, as the Techdirt blog states, the release is somewhat confusing in regard to what IP infringement was actually involved---
Still, it seems notable that in late November, ICE proudly announced that it had seized over a million websites, though frankly, the press release raises a hell of a lot more questions than it answers. First off, it appears that ICE has no clue that copyright and trademark are entirely different things.
More than 1 million copyright-infringing website domain names selling counterfeit automotive parts, electrical components, personal care items and other fake goods were criminally and civilly seized in the past year through the combined efforts of law-enforcement agencies across the world, high-profile industry representatives and anti-counterfeiting associations.
"Copyright infringing website domain names" already is a weird description (were the URLs themselves infringing?) but it's made even weirder by saying that these sites were seized because they were selling counterfeits. Counterfeiting is a trademark issue, not a copyright one. Those laws are entirely different.
In conclusion, unless we are contemplating expansion of the ICANN RPMs beyond a narrow form of cybersquatting to cover sale of counterfeit goods and websites infringing copyright (a proposition for which consensus could not likely be achieved), even if the million-plus domain names could be obtained their relationship to our work seems tangential at best.
Philip S. Corwin
Policy Counsel
VeriSign, Inc.
12061 Bluemont Way
Reston, VA 20190
703-948-4648/Direct
571-342-7489/Cell
"Luck is the residue of design" -- Branch Rickey
-----Original Message----- From: GNSO-RPM-WG [mailto:gnso-rpm-wg-bounces@icann.org] On Behalf Of George Kirikos Sent: Wednesday, January 02, 2019 11:48 AM To: gnso-rpm-wg <gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org> Subject: [EXTERNAL] [GNSO-RPM-WG] ICE domain name seizures -- potential source of data for RPM PDP?
Hi folks,
Happy New Year.
There was news about ICE seizing over 1 million domain names, see:
https://www.ice.gov/news/releases/over-million-websites-seized-global-operat...
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20181213/18030341224/ice-seizes-over-1-mil...
I was curious whether anyone (maybe a registrar, registry, or TM holders who were involved, i.e. the "industry partners") has and can share the complete list of domain names that were seized, as that might be a potential source of data for our work.
Sincerely,
George Kirikos
416-588-0269
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