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Madonna wins domain name battle

GENEVA (Reuters) -- Pop superstar Madonna has won her case at an international panel to evict a New York cybersquatter from the Internet address madonna.com, which was initially a porn site, U.N. arbitrators said on Monday.

The American singer, whose famous hits include "Like a Virgin" and "Material Girl," filed the complaint in July at the Geneva-based World Intellectual Property Organization against businessman Dan Parisi who was first to register the Internet address.

A three-member panel at WIPO, the United Nations copyright and intellectual property agency that runs an arbitration system that evicts cybersquatters, ordered Parisi to transfer the site to Madonna.

The panel said Parisi, who is a Web site developer, had no trademark right to the name Madonna and failed to prove legitimate interest in the Internet domain name that he had registered in bad faith.

Cybersquatters are people who register famous names as domains in the hope of making a quick profit.

Madonna argued that the site, which initially carried pornography that was later removed, tarnished her name. WIPO noted that the singer had used her name and trademark Madonna professionally since 1979.

WIPO said this was not the first cybersquatting case involving Parisi, who had registered domain names including wallstreetjournal.com.

As domain names have become more valuable with the meteoric rise of the Internet, a market has emerged for opportunists to grab addresses in the current system, which is largely first come, first served.

WIPO's fast-track arbitration system allows firms and individuals to avoid costly lawsuits in cases when mischief is obviously involved or large amounts of money are at stake.

WIPO has received more than 1,000 cases related to disputed domain names since its arbitration system began last year. Decisions were made in more than half of the cases, some 80 percent of which went in favor of the complainants.

Companies that have won back their names from alleged cybersquatters through WIPO so far include Christian Dior, Deutsche Bank, Microsoft and Nike.

WIPO has also ruled in favor of celebrities, including Hollywood film star Julia Roberts and British rock band Jethro Tull, to evict cybersquatters.

But British pop star Sting failed in his attempt this year to win back sting.com from an American who had registered it first. The application was denied last month by WIPO because it said sting was "a common English word."

Copyright 2000 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



RELATED STORIES:
Madonna bids to win domain name game
September 13, 2000
'Cybersquatters:' Invading big names' domains
September 6, 2000
France Telecom, easyJet lose 'cybersquat' cases
August 28, 2000
Analysis: Internet body seen as future of government
August 24, 2000
Jimi Hendrix family wins domain name
August 8, 2000

RELATED SITES:
Madonna.com
World Intellectual Property Organization


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