Here is the text of a second message I attempted to post to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . I have posted it to the GA list, but in deference to their no-cross-posts policy I am sending it separately to IFWP & Domain-Policy. ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Wed, 14 Jul 1999 14:18:27 -0400 (EDT) From: Michael Froomkin - U.Miami School of Law <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Why the WIPO Report is Wrong about Famous Marks (II-procedure) [this is a quote from paras. 108-116 & 145 of my wipo commentary. You can find it at http://www.law.miami.edu/~amf/commentary.htm#_1_25 ] Problem: Vague & Prejudicial Criteria. The fear that 'discipline and rigor' would be short-lived at best is strengthened not only by WIPO's inability to make an estimate of the total number of marks likely to qualify, but also by the vague and in one case prejudicial criteria that WIPO proposes be used to rule on applications for global famousness. To begin with, WIPO offers the six vague and manipulable considerations for determining if a mark is famous or well-known issued by WIPO Standing Committee on Trademarks, Industrial Designs and Geographical Indications and set out in Para. 282 of the Final Report. WIPO then added a seventh "non-exhaustive" criterion not approved by the committee: "Evidence of the mark being the subject of attempts by non-authorized third parties to register the same or confusingly similar names as domain names." Final Report, Paragraph. 283. No justification was offered for this suggestion in the Interim Report other than it would serve "to accommodate the specificities of the protection of famous and well-known marks in relation to domain names" and, again, no further justification for this seventh factor is offered in the Final Report. Why precisely a mark should be more likely to be considered globally famous because it happens to attract the attention of a single enthusiastic domain name speculator, numerous parody sites, or nettlesome critics, is unclear. Indeed, if a firm is attracting the attention of many critics who register names similar to it as a form of protest, this seems to be the weakest case for special protection. Indeed, as WIPO argues ADR is needed because cybersquatting affects so many trademark holders, making being the subject of cybersquatting an indication of global famousness seems especially odd. Furthermore, the experience of the United States with the federal Anti-Dilution Act suggests that when faced with a blameless trademark holder, a predatory domain name registrant, and a set of rules that allows the decision maker to do equity, even federal judges cannot resist declaring that trademarks one never heard of are famous. Adding the seventh criterion ensures that the decks will be stacked before the special tribunals as well, with predictable results. Problem: Inappropriate Additional Remedies and Benefits-"Evidentiary Presumption". WIPO also proposes that the owners of certified globally famous trademarks benefit from an "evidentiary presumption". The "evidentiary presumption" is in fact a shifting of the burden of proof. The mechanism is not explained as clearly as one would like, but it appears that after having a mark certified as globally famous, a mark-holder would begin an ADR proceeding against a registrant in the ordinary manner. Instead of having to allege and carry the burden of proof that the registrant had no right to use the domain name, and the registrant was acting in bad faith, the extra-famous mark holder would only have to persuade the arbitrators that the domain is "misleading similar" to his mark and that it is being used in a manner which damages his interests. Upon that lesser showing (and apparently without the benefit of knowing how the arbitrators have ruled on the complainant's suggestion that the burden of proof be reversed), the registrant will then have the burden of proving "justification" for her use of the domain name. Final Report, Paragraph 289. There are four problems with this idea. First, the term "misleadingly similar" is vague and likely to be interpreted in an over-broad manner. Second, the suggestion that any use of a domain name that might "damage the interests of the owner of the mark" sweeps far too broad, and will invite harassment of many legitimate domain name registrants. Third, reversing the burden of proof-requiring someone to prove their good faith-is inherently unfair. Fourth, the procedure proposed for the ADRs in Annex V of the Final Report is designed in a manner that fails to ensure that the respondent will given sufficient notice as to the case which he has to answer. What is "misleadingly similar"? WIPO's Final Report does not define the term "misleading similar". While one could profitably attach some sort of definition to the name (it sound as if it has some relationship to the US idea of "likelihood of confusion" except that in the context of a famous mark one would expect more a dilution than a confusion test), thus perhaps lessening the ill effects of this proposal, I think it a fundamentally unprofitable exercise because the entire idea is founded on a misconception. In the US, and I suspect elsewhere as well, it is not seriously disputed that a domain name is not a trademark. Therefore, what determines whether the registrant of a domain name is infringing the rights of any mark-holder, whether or not the mark is famous, is how the domain name is being used. The issue therefore is not whether the domain is the same as, or close to, or very close to a trademark, but whether the name plus the uses made of that name dilute the mark. What will "damage the interests of the owner of the mark"? The suggestion that the owner of a certified famous mark need only allege that the registrant's use of the domain name somehow damages the "interests" of the owner of the mark requires too gentle a showing and risks inviting frivolous and harassing claims. If Bob is running a site parodying Alice's product, or a site that seeks to gather potential litigants to sue for an alleged product defect in Alice's product, or an "anti-Alice" site with a confusing name such as A1ice, or a site in which Bob's protest group is coordinating a boycott against Alice for her labor or environmental policies, it is quite likely that Bob is "damaging" Alice's "interests"--yet each of these uses of a domain name similar to or even identical to Alice's trademark is legal, and some are commendable. At the very least, and as a deterrent to harassing applications, Alice, the applicant, should be required to affirmatively allege that she believes there is no reasonable case to be made that Bob is engaged in non-commercial activities. Is burden-shifting fair and appropriate? The suggestion that an person should be considered a presumptive cybersquatter merely because they register a domain name similar to a well-known trademark is a novel one. One rarely if ever finds cases in the law of civilized countries where a person must prove their innocence of an offence by a preponderance of the evidence. This may seem a trivial point, but one must recall that the critical issue is likely to be whether the registrant has"rights and legitimate interests" in the name. The remaining uncertainty about what law will be applied to determine this question, and precisely what the terms mean, is worrying. Combined with the likelihood that many respondents will be unrepresented consumers with no experience in arbitration, much less the on-line variety, while the famous mark holders are likely to the parties with the greatest experience at both and the finest representation, and the issue of the burden of proof becomes more significant. WIPO argues that since the ADR is now more limited than in the Interim Report, this evidentiary presumption can no longer be used in a way that is likely to damage recognized rights of free speech. Alas, WIPO's sanguine description of the likely uses of its proposal likely will prove optimistic. Furthermore, WIPO suggests at several places in the Final Report that the ADR procedure proposed is only a first careful step towards the more ambitious plan it outlined in the Interim Report. One should thus think carefully about the potential long-term consequences of Chapter 4 in this context. [and from para. 145:] ...in cases where the complainant benefits from a certified globally famous mark, there appears to be no provision for putting the registrant on notice as to the burden of proof he may have to shoulder. If there is a dispute as to whether the domain name is "misleadingly similar" (and given that the term is not defined, such disputes are inevitable), it seems only fair to require the arbitrators to first decide whether they accept this allegation (after hearing from the registrant), in order to then put the registrant on notice as to the burden of proof he faces. -- A. Michael Froomkin | Professor of Law | [EMAIL PROTECTED] U. Miami School of Law, P.O. Box 248087, Coral Gables, FL 33124 USA +1 (305) 284-4285 | +1 (305) 284-6506 (fax) | http://www.law.tm --> It's hot here. <--
[IFWP] Why the WIPO Report is Wrong about Famous Marks (II-procedure) (fwd)
Michael Froomkin - U.Miami School of Law Thu, 15 Jul 1999 07:31:22 -0700