Tag Archives: arbitration

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Google files complaint to seize GooglePlay.com to complete Android Market rebranding

136777729 ffa183362f z 520x245 Google files complaint to seize GooglePlay.com to complete Android Market rebranding

The rebranding process for Android Market is in high gear after Google announced this week that it would now be referred to as “Google Play“. All of the content that is currently available from Google will be available under this umbrella.

Here’s what the company had to say about the change on Tuesday:

Today we’re eliminating all that hassle with Google Play, a digital entertainment destination where you can find, enjoy and share your favorite music, movies, books and apps on the web and on your Android phone or tablet. Google Play is entirely cloud-based so all your music, movies, books and apps are stored online, always available to you, and you never have to worry about losing them or moving them again.

There’s one more thing Google is going to need before the transformation is complete though, and that’s the domain name GooglePlay.com. The domain is currently owned by a resident in Japan and the search giant has just filed a complaint with the National Arbitration Forum to seize it, according to a report by Fusible.

Even though Google only filed a trademark for the name the day before Google Play was announced, it does include Google’s main trademark and company name, so it shouldn’t be a long process to get the domain from its current owner.

Google Play currently sits at http://play.google.com, but is most certainly missing out on a lot of traffic from those who are entering GooglePlay.com into their browser.

The company is getting really good at winning domains, having just scored 32 squatted domains that infringed on various trademarks that it owns.

For Google to win the rights to this domain, there has to be one or more infractions of ICANN’s guidelines:

(1) the domain name is identical or confusingly similar to a trademark in which the complainant has rights
(2) the owner has no rights or legitimate interests in respect of the domain name and;
(3) the domain name has been registered and is being used in bad faith.

Needless to say, since the domain currently is an ad-farm and isn’t a part of Google itself, this should be yet another win for the company.

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Google files complaint to seize GooglePlay.com to complete Android Market rebranding

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Google refuses to give up on squatted domains that target YouTube users

2585805141 d0ace5a7a4 b 520x245 Google refuses to give up on squatted domains that target YouTube users

When you’re a company as big as Google, protecting your trademarks is apparently a full-time job. Last week we reported that Google had won 32 domains that were clearly registered by other parties to trick unsuspecting web surfers as they accidentally typed the wrong URL.

The majority of the domains seized last week were various misspellings of “Google”, but the company is also going after typo-squatted domain names having to do with YouTube as well. At the beginning of January, the company was able to secure five of those close misspellings, but still haven’t gotten all of the domains that it feels it should.

According to Fusible, Google is attempting to gain control of an additional 13 domains that it claims infringes on the YouTube trademark. The only problem is that these domains were registered before the YouTube trademark went into effect. That fact is going to make the fight tougher for Google to win the domains.

Google has submitted a new filing with the National Arbitration Forum in yet another attempt to get the following domains turned over:

tyoutube.com, youstube.com, youtbue.com, youttube.com, youtubenaruto.com, youtubr.com, youtubube.com, youtubve.com, youtune.com, yoututbe.com, youtuube.com, youyube.com, and yutub.com

Domain squatting can be a lucrative business to get into, especially when you have a common misspelling of a huge brand name. For example, when you visit “youstube.com” you’re presented with the following advertising scheme:

Survey 2012 520x175 Google refuses to give up on squatted domains that target YouTube users

These types of campaigns can make thousands of dollars for companies who scoop up commonly misspelled domains in bulk with little or no involvement or support needed once the advertisements are in place.

Google will continue to fight for these domains and claim that users of its services are being purposely tricked into participating in click-schemes that never result in getting anything for free like the sites claim.

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Google refuses to give up on squatted domains that target YouTube users