School Wins Cybersquatting Case, But Was It Worth It?

from the no-this-isn't-a-school-site-.com dept

A school in the UK has won a three-year domain-squatting case against some Canadian domain parkers. The school, called Framlingham College, wanted to set up shop at framlinghamcollege.co.uk, but the domain parkers beat them to the punch, and put up a page with links to, among other things, online dating sites. Apparently these sites then had links to “mature porn,” which upset the administrators of the Christian school, and gave the BBC justification for the tasty headline “School’s links to porn site end.” It seems right that the school was able to wrest control of the site back from domain parkers, illustrating that in this instance, the dispute and resolution system worked. That said, was it such an important battle? The head of the school notes “I have no doubt that people who were seriously interested in the college will have found this site and then run a mile” — so it’s not as if people were being fooled into thinking it was the school’s actual site. And there are these things these days called search engines that many people use to locate sites they’re looking for, rather than just trying random URLs. Perhaps the College would have been better off using some of the resources it devoted to this battle on search-engine optimization, since its real site doesn’t seem to appear in the first five pages of Google results for a search on its name. Isn’t people being able to find the school’s site more important than the URL it uses?

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Comments on “School Wins Cybersquatting Case, But Was It Worth It?”

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12 Comments
PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re:

It might have been cheaper, but I bet the school would not have done any such thing on principle. The squatters had not right to the domain, and certainly no right to $10k just for having bought it first. Besides, the legal system does work differently outside of the US, and the school may have been awarded their legal fees on top of the domain (if this did make it to court – it actually looks like a simple dispute process with Nominet, which doesn’t need lawyers AFAIK).

As for whether this whole case was worth it, it depends on how you see it. The domain was clearly their rightful property to begin with, so simply getting it back may have been worth it to them. Besides, having a relevant domain name such as this can help search rankings in Google without further action. Some people will still try to guess domain names before they go to a search engine, so it’s probably a good move.

Donkey beater says:

No right?

PaulT… why in the world would they have no right to the domain? Just because someone else has a similiar registered or are operating under a certain name, doesn’t give them absolute control over that name. ESPECIALLY since they weren’t trying to convince anyone they were the school in question.

Even copyright only copyrights and EXPRESSION of an idea… not the idea itself. If the school’s name was trademarked AND an idiot in a hurry might mistake the squatter site for the school site (obviously not the case) THEN they would have had a case.

Instead, this was an example of a school who used the system to bully someone else because of their own lack of foresight.

Your Gawd and Master says:

Re: No right?

I just love how you use the word “bully”. Tell me, if I kidnap your family and ask for a ransom, if you call the police, are you bullying ME?!?!?

Do you realize there is actually a process that you go through to settle domain disputes and it doesn’t involve “bullying”. Hell, it doesn’t even involve the courts(most of the time).

Anonymous Coward says:

Maybe they just didn’t optimize for the Google search? Live and Yahoo bring them up right at the top.

Regardless, it’s a complete dodge to say they should have invested in search optimization when Canadian squatters were essentially extorting their school’s “name as a domain” and linking it to mature content. And it taking 3 years to resolved does not sound like the dispute and resolution system “worked”. It sounds more like they eventually lucked out.

Another Paul says:

If the school had taken the time to file a remotely adequate complaint back in 2005 they would have won the name 3 years ago. Instead, their 2005 complaint was deemed inadequate even though the domain holder didn’t even bother to respond to it. The “battle” was only brought about by the schools incompetence.

As for the importance of the domain vs seo – having the most logical domain helps those who directly navigate and also helps with seo.

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