18 Feb 2008 03:42:20 | Lois S.
It's your domain, or so you say. One morning, you wake up to
find that it's registered in someone else's name.
Can you prove it's yours? Can you get it back?
The sex.com story
One morning, Gary Kremen woke up to find that the domain name
sex.com, which he'd registered in 1994, had changed hands and
was registered to ex- convict Stephen Michael Cohen. In 1995,
Cohen had allegedly written a fake letter with a forged
signature to Network Solutions, the registrar. He stated in that
letter that control of sex.com was to be turned over to him.
In 2000, the court found the letter to be fraudulent and ruled
that sex.com was to be returned to Kremen. Cohen was ordered to
pay $65 million in punitive damages and for lost revenue. He
never paid it, however, fleeing the US instead.
The story continued with charges against Network Solutions for
mismanagement of sex.com. A lower court ruled in 2000 that
Network Solutions was not accountable for its negligence in
handling the domain. A domain name was not tangible property,
according to the judge. In 2003, the US Appeals Court ruled that
Kremen did have property rights to the domain. The following
year, Kremen reached a settlement with VeriSign, the owner of
Network Solutions. While the amount was undisclosed, it was
rumored to be over $15 million.
Domains and ICANN
It's doubtful that any other domain has the value of sex.com.
Our domains are valuable to us, though, and we want them to be
protected. If they are stolen, we don't want to spend years
fighting to get them back.
ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) was
created in 1998 to help manage domain names, among other
responsibilities. At the ICANN website, we read that ICANN "ˇis
dedicated to preserving the operational stability of the
Internetˇand to developing policy appropriate to its missionˇ."
Developed in 2004, ICANN's Registrar Transfer Dispute Resolution
Policy (TDRP) provides detailed steps for registrars to follow
if a domain transfer is disputed. Registrars aren't obligated to
follow this policy, and it doesn't guarantee resolution to
domain transfer disputes. However, it provides a suggested
policy for registrars to help reach resolutions when domain
disputes arise.
Domain theft and ICANN
What should you do if you discover that someone has hijacked
your domain name?
First, contact the registrar where you had the domain
registered. With evidence that you didn't authorize the domain
to be transferred to another person, that registrar should take
the necessary steps to try to return the domain to you.
Unfortunately, some registrars aren't inclined to make the
effort to do this, particularly (but not necessarily) those with
a lower profit margin per domain.
If the registrar for your domain won't take action on your
behalf, go to the gaining registrar with your case. This
registrar; the one where your domain is now registered; may or
may not want to look into the situation, but you can try your
luck with it.
According to ICANN's TDRP, registrars should "ˇ first of all
attempt to resolve the problem among the Registrars involved in
the disputeˇ." If they aren't successful, they should then file
a dispute with ICANN.
In this ICANN April 2005 report, the suggestion was made (on
page 5) to make the dispute resolution process accessible to
registrants. At this time, though, if neither registrar will
work to help you or will take the issue to ICANN, the ICANN
dispute resolution process isn't available to you.
Although ICANN's Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy
is intended for disputes over trademarked domains, some
registrants have used it to try to get hijacked domains back.
You can file a complaint via one of ICANN's Approved Providers
for Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy.
Domains and the courts
The legal route that sex.com registrant Gary Kremen took is open
to you as well. Look for a lawyer in the country of the domain
registrar who has experience handling domain name disputes.
At this point, you need to weigh the value of your domain with
the costs involved in getting it back. The value of sex.com made
the legal battle financially worthwhile for Kremen, but many of
us would have to stop at this point.
Protecting your domain
Nothing you can do can guarantee that your domain won't be
hijacked. However, you can take a number of precautions to
greatly reduce the chances of it happening. For tips on
protecting your domain, see the article Information Highwaymen
and Your Domain here:
http://articles.websitesource.com/information_highwaymen.shtml .
About the author:
About Author :
: