Should we say - "a Daniel has come to judgment"? Because we already know any decision here will and must be purely political. After all the 'one the one hand...on the other hand' details, the learned Professor has come to what we knew going in: the AGB does not deter the string being assigned, international IP law does not forbid it and the principle of territoriality (which some of us used to argue for local trademarks to be acknowledged and respected in the Trademark Clearing House concept and was rejected by the community) is not a basis for string assignment in the gTLD. -Carlton ============================== Carlton A Samuels Mobile: 876-818-1799 *Strategy, Planning, Governance, Assessment & Turnaround* ============================= On Mon, Apr 14, 2014 at 10:49 PM, <hcarrascob@gmail.com> wrote:
[[--Translated text (es -> en)--]]
Subject: Regarding the Amazon domain. From: hcarrascob@gmail.com
Dear,
As it is of interest to many LACRALO aquencontrarn a link to a report about the situation right domain Amazon.:
http://www.icann.org/en/news/correspondence/crocker-to-dryden-07apr14-en.pdf
This report concludes that:
i) there is no rule of international, regional or national law applicable in the field of geogrficas indications requiring ICANN to reject the application; ii) there is no rule of international, regional or national law applicable intellectual property and in particular brands or in the field of fundamental rights, requiring ICANN to accept this request.
Attentive to your comments.
Regards
_______________________________________________
[[--Original text (es) http://mm.icann.org/transbot_archive/8893e0c72a.html --]]
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