-
others distinguish between the two terms. In the
former definition, the
cybersquatter may
offer to sell the
domain to the
person or
company who owns a trademark...
- may be led to any URL,
including an
alternative website owned by a
cybersquatter. The typosquatter's URL will
usually be
similar to the victim's site...
- she won the
rights to the
Internet domain name silviasaint.com from a
cybersquatter in a
Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution
Policy action. In 2007,...
- not of Cruise, and that
Cruise was hetero****ual. In 2006,
Cruise sued
cybersquatter Jeff
Burgar to
obtain control of the TomCruise.com
domain name. When...
-
typographical errors made by
users of the Internet. Typically, the
cybersquatter will
register a
likely typo of a frequently-accessed
website address...
-
domain names specifically and to
provide explicit remedies against cybersquatters. In the US, the
legal situation was
clarified by the Anticybersquatting...
-
domain name by
making cybersquatting claims against a
domain name’s "
cybersquatter" owner. This
often intimidates domain name
owners into transferring...
- that no
further action needed to be taken. In
April 2024, an
anonymous cybersquatter purchased the UK
domain name for the
brand and
directed the URL to a...
- have
often been
registered in the DNS,
either by
their creators or by
cybersquatters attempting to
profit from it. This
phenomenon prompted NBC to purchase...
- equivalent, ShareTV.com, from a
cybersquatter. In 2013,
Richmond won a
lawsuit for ShareTV.com
against the
cybersquatter,
despite the fact that they owned...