Konstantinos Komaitis
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Let's Stop the Big, Fat Trademark Lobbying!

01/20/2011

6 Comments

 
If you think that the issue of trademark protection in the new gTLDs was resolved, well you – like me – might be in for a big surprise. I knew that the recommendations of the Special Trademark Issues (STI) team were not at the satisfaction of the trademark community and I knew that trademark owners had approached ICANN’s Governmental Advisory Committee (GAC) as the last resort in actually getting what they wanted: overbroad, extra, uber(call it what you want, it is the same) protection for trademarks under the new gTLD programme. What, however, happened over the past few days and almost a month prior to the meeting between ICANN and the GAC is that the interaction between the GAC and the trademark community became more formalised and more institutional.

According to the World Trademark Review, the GAC has appointed UK’s GAC representative, Mark Carvell, ‘to collect community thoughts on this topic’. Now, here is the catch: repeating the same mistake the Implementation Recommendation Team (IRT) did almost two years ago, Mr. Carvell appears to have only summoned the industry in London last Friday to hear their views on what they would consider as an appropriate solution to the trademark conundrum. Vodafone, BBC, Richemont, BSkyB International and Shell were amongst the participants – and they all claimed that the only compromise they would consider would be going back to the IRT recommendations. To avoid any misunderstanding, the IRT is not a compromise nor should it be considered as such. I have repeatedly said that the problem with the IRT recommendation was that it was totally biased, disrespectful of the rights of legitimate domain name holders and users and an unnecessary document, parts of which were re-writing trademark law.

In theory, I should not really care about what the trademark community is trying to do. The IRT is so very expansive of trademark rights that, if we were to go back to it, it would feed my research for many years. Ethically and academically though I have a big problem. I never advocated against protecting trademarks in the Internet and I have been in favour of putting forward policies that would cure the issue of cybersquatting – past, present and future. But, the IRT does so much more – it re-writes trademark law. Over the past couple of years, I have blogged about it, I have discussed it with colleagues and students, I have researched on it and all seem to point to the same direction: the recommendations of the IRT team were biased, unreasonable and against the fundamental principles of trademark law. Do you think it is accidental that courts and legislators do not make any mention on any of ICANN’s trademark polices? It is simply because these mechanisms that are promoted so vociferously by the trademark community are not in compliance with trademark law. Period! So, by rejecting the IRT, ICANN did something right – it at least said no to an expansive approach that is against legal theory and practice. And, by forming the STI, ICANN did another thing right – it put in motion its multistakeholder model and let the community, as a collective body, to decide. (And, before I am accused for saying this because I was a member of the STI, let me say that I say it because of that: I witnessed the effort, the negotiations and the exchange of ideas that took place within this multistakeholder environment. And the STI should be applauded for managing to reach conclusions that all stakeholders- including the Intellectual Property Constituency - signed on to).

But, here is a question that keeps coming on my mind: why wasn’t a wider part of the community invited to the London meeting: academics that could talk about the law and registrants that could share their experience on the bullying they have to suffer from big and powerful brand owners? Why did only big and powerful brand owners make the cut? So, it is not really surprising that the discussion last Friday seemed to be going back to the IRT report.

This whole process manifests one big problem: trademark owners have the money, the resources, the stamina and the political leverage to lobby, and lobby and lobby. Registrants on the other hand do not have the money or the resources to engage in such a campaign, but they do have the stamina. And, what is truly upsetting is that in reality, they actually get to lose much more than trademark owners – they get to lose their right to communicate undisturbed, they get to lose their right to express themselves freely and they get to miss the opportunity of entering the DNS, things that trademark law has so far protected from. Instead, what they get to gain is an unfriendly DNS, bullying and intimidation.

So, here is an idea and I really hope it works: since legitimate registrants do not have the money or the resources to engage in endless lobbying, let’s use the Internet in order to make our voices heard. I would like to encourage everyone who agrees that we should not go back to the IRT and that trademark protection has been resolved through the STI recommendations, to sign on this blog post via the comments’ section. And, I promise that I will do my best to bring this to the attention of ICANN. 

 


Comments

Elias Comnenos
01/20/2011 11:53

since legitimate registrants do not have the money or the resources to engage in endless lobbying, let’s use the Internet in order to make our voices heard. We should not go back to the IRT and trademark protection has been resolved through the STI recommendations

Reply
Robin Gross link
01/20/2011 12:21

This is great, Konstantinos!

I am in complete agreement that ICANN should not allow the trademark lobby to bully it into creating unprecedented new rights for trademark holders, as was suggested by the IRT.

ICANN works by facilitating compromise and consensus among competing interests, not allowing the greediest to force its agenda on the rest of the community through persistence of pressure.

The IRT represents a terrible mistake for ICANN: a secretive group of trademark industry insiders, hand-picked by the IPC to propose its policy "wish list". Once revealed, IRT was solidly rejected by the wider community for its draconian & one-sided provisions.

It is disappointing to see the trademark lobby trying to revive those flawed and unbalanced recommendations through lobbying the GAC.

And who says 'government is the handmaiden of business'?

Reply
Elaine
01/20/2011 12:45

"There can be no check to special interests so long as channels of collusion flow between secretive boardrooms and secretive halls of government." Teddy Roosevelt, 1910.

Reply
Alex Gakuru
01/22/2011 01:12

From my African perspective, London's Big Brand-GAC meeting is the latest attempt to scuttle global public interest in favour of reinforced private-commercial monopolization over the Internet. Threatens global expression, commercial interests and economic aspirations of developing regions.

Noting that the meeting a) yet again failed on inclusive global policy development process b) was of a select, if quietly handpicked or minimalist publicised trademark interests lobbyists and GAC representatives( suggestive of ulterior motives?) c) chosen London appears to recycled previous IRT 3 large cities of well-established Trademark/IP private clubs d) rushed and missing wide community consultation.

A regurgitation of an old issue we had taken as resolved, thus if may repeat, opposite old argument that developing regions suffer from weak, immature or non-existent local trademarks rights protection legal frameworks. It is therefore imperative that all world regions GAC representatives take every due caution before signing-on to Big Brands interests protection while underneath killing “all others' rights” on the Internet.

Leading me to wonder whether developing regions GAC representatives present, if any, are fully aware of the consequences? Much to the detriment of developing countries hope of ever realising the benefits of connecting, if and when they finally fully get connected – for they shall find no names left that are not trademarked by developed countries advanced IP industry.

I laud Konstantinos and your entire STI Team for burning midnight oil in 2009 on wide and intensive give-and-take consultations to reach multi-stakeholders acceptable STI document. Trademark owners renewed attempts to trash such a great document cannot be allowed to rule!

Gakuru is elected to representative Africa at the Executive Committee, Non-Commercial Users Constituency (NCUC) at ICANN, here expressing own views.

Reply
Rudi Vansnick link
01/23/2011 12:24

TM already being protected by themselves, I do not see a reason why they should be protected by other organizations. And certainly not by a not-for-profit organization that has nothing to do with intellectual property as such. ICANN has no duties in declaring a name being a Trade Mark or not. It is up to the instances having the authority to judge such rights.

If for every event outside the business perspectives a TM owner has the right to ask for protection outside this business perspective, we will have to pay for every word we speak or write. As was said by previous repliers ICANN should stay at the sidelines and can not be involved in judging ownership rights, as ICANN is even not (yet) judging the ownership of a domain name. So far, outside organizations are judging this.

Just my cent of reflection.

Rudi Vansnick
EURALO member, ISOC Belgium chair.

Reply
trademark search canada link
03/15/2012 04:23

It’s really great stuff overall, I just wanted to say thank you. I am looking forward to another great article from your side. i like this type of content.

Reply



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    KK

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