From Wikipedia: > A scam increasing in frequency, as of October 2011, is an email originating from a domain name registrar or IT consulting company based in China that purports to notify a trademark holder that another entity is seeking to register the client’s trademark or business name as a domain name in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, or Asia.[3] The email gives the brand owner a short period in time in which to secure the domain name for their own. These notifications are essentially solicitations. Generally, in the event there really is a third-party who is seeking to register your brand name for nefarious purposes, there are channels available for addressing such uses if and when they materialize.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scams_in_intellectual_property On 10/05/15 19:23, Jorge Araya Navarro wrote: > I thought for one second it was real... > > > El domingo 04 de octubre del 2015 a las 1653 horas, Luke escribió: > >> 90% probability it's a scam. I've gotten those e-mails too, and I don't >> even own a company. >> >> Here's some example scam/spam from (probably) the same group: >> http://foremostmedia.blogspot.com/2010/07/notice-of-internet-intellectual.html >> >> On 10/04/2015 06:39 PM, Tiberiu-Cezar Tehnoetic wrote: >>> On 04.10.2015 23:54, Daniel Milewski wrote: >>>> It looks like spam for me. Could you forward the message's headers too? >>> I was about to ask the same thing. In Thunderbird-based clients, this is >>> right click on e-mail -> Forward As -> Attachment. >>> >>> Thanks. >>> >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Dev mailing list >>> [email protected] >>> https://lists.parabola.nu/mailman/listinfo/dev >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Dev mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.parabola.nu/mailman/listinfo/dev > _______________________________________________ Dev mailing list [email protected] https://lists.parabola.nu/mailman/listinfo/dev
