pure coincidence one of them is somehow associated w/ ICANN (I found them
via my local chamber of commerce). He had told me the only success he knew
of in a case like this was "sex.com". It wasn't exactly a domain squatting
case, though. They were able to prove that forgery was used to change the
registrant.
If your sole purpose is to get the domain back, you're probably out of
luck. You could offer to buy it out-right.
However, if the domain is being used to somehow harm or slander you /
your company, it's time to talk to a lawyer.
I once put in an offer for "songs.com". However, they wanted $150,00 for
it, which was about $149,990 more than I wanted to pay for it.
At 01:04 PM 10/4/2004, you wrote:
>Subject: Domain Squatters
>From: "Tangorre, Michael" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Date: Mon, 4 Oct 2004 11:49:02 -0400
>Thread:
>http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/index.cfm/method=messages&threadid=14328&forumid=5#130017
>
>Anyone successfully sue a domain squatter that held the domain name that
>was also your company's DBA name?
>
>
>Michael T. Tangorre
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