Bloggers Picking Up on the Case (and They Seem to Agree with Us)
Posted by Domain Name David on Sep 29, 2008
We wanted to thank 2 bloggers for talking about our case recently. The blog mentioning the case are:
StartupDunia - Pranav Dharma seems to agree with our stance per his post which can be seen here.
MediaNama - Nikhil Pahwa comments on the case in his post which can be seen here.
We appreciate folks like Pranav and Nikhil bringing attention to this case and the dangerous precedent that Consim is setting by trying to bully their way to getting premium Indian domain names which are being legitimately used. Ultimately, such actions by Consim have the potential to tilt the internet in Indian in favor of larger, more well-capitalized firms and hurt entrepreneurs. We, of course, remain confident that NIXI understands this and will make the right decision.
We look forward to seeing what their readers have to say and keeping them posted on developments as they unfold.
This could set a dangerous precedent for the internet in India
Posted by Domain Name David on Sep 9, 2008
If those who legitimately register a domain name can be hijacked by others on the basis of speculative arguments and misstated facts and figures, this makes doing things on the web in India very difficult.
We have every faith in NIXI that they’ll see through this attempt as its implications for the development of the internet in India could be far-reaching. If generic terms can be taken away from rightful owners, we’d expect the owners of samosa.com to start laying claim to any site that has the name “samosa” in it.
One can argue that the earliest bird should get the worm - in other words, the first corporation who is able to register a generic term should “own” that term outright.
The problem is, the very reason a term is generic is because the term existed before the corporation got to it - in other words, there were birds who got to the worm way, way earlier (as early as the 13th century!). If a 13th century cook can lay claim to “samosa,” then the 21st century sidewalk samosa walla may conceivably be compelled to pay the original somosa walla a royalty.
That makes no sense of, course. And the reason is simple. Generic terms have no owners - they belong to the world.
Our Response Has Been Submitted
Posted by Domain Name David on Sep 5, 2008
Today, we sent a detailed response to NIXI, the arbitrator and the complainant in the case for tamilmatrimony.co.in. Our response is well-constructed and provides business and legal context for why we feel this complaint is without merit.
We look forward to hearing from NIXI on this and are confident they’ll see our viewpoint.