No, but the intentions of the domain registrant become more than a bit
obvious.  He either intentionally, or unwittingly registered a trademarked
name.  Which do you think it is?  Right now the domain's only use appears to
be for free email addresses, and that fact certainly won't help his court
case.  I'm amazed anyone would actually persue litigation in the matter.
It's probably going to cost him some money in the long run.

Jim


----- Original Message -----
From: "William X. Walsh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, February 23, 2001 9:40 PM
Subject: Re[3]: Domain Disputes - TUCOWS is now acting as judge and jury!!!


> Hello inc,
>
> Friday, February 23, 2001, 5:46:37 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>
>
> >> Finally someone at Tucows that can read!!!
>
>
> > is this true?
>
> > "These domain names are based on other famous marks, such as Air Jordan,
> > Budweiser, Heineken, to name a few. Sometimes the Respondent couples the
> > famous mark with another descriptive noun to create the domain name."
>
>
> > and this wouldn't have helped you at all:
>
> > "The Respondent stated that his client was willing to sell the domain
name
> > for $5,000."
>
>
> There is absolutely nothing wrong, in the law or otherwise, with
> registering a domain name and offering it for sale.
>
> --
> Best regards,
>  William                            mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>

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