Date: Fri, 17 Sep 1999 10:22:41 -0400 From: Rachel Anderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> COMMUNICATIONS-RELATED HEADLINES for SEPTEMBER 17, 1999 COPYRIGHT Judges Pick David Over Goliath in Domain Name Suits (CyberTimes) Issue: Copyright While the courts have tended to side with large trademark holders in many Internet domain name cases, a Boston judge has recently ruled in favor of the little guy in such a suit. Hasbro, the giant toy maker, had charged Clue Computing, a tiny Colorado-based computer consultant, with trademark infringement and dilution for registering the "clue.com" domain name. In this case Hasbro had to prove that the well-known trademark for its board game "Clue" was inherently diminished by Clue Computing's use of the domain name. Judge Douglas P Woodlock was not convinced, finding that the legitimate competing use of the domain name is not dilution. "Holders of a famous mark are not automatically entitled to use that mark as their domain name; trademark law does not support such a monopoly," the judge wrote. Carl Oppedahl, an intellectual property lawyer based in Colorado, predicts that the ruling in this case is "going to help domain-name owners avoid being panicked by cease-and-desist letters [from large trademark holders]. It should give should give them courage." [SOURCE: CyberTimes, AUTHOR: Carl S. Kaplan] (http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/09/cyber/cyberlaw/17law.html)