As 2007 comes to a close, the increased use and misuse of domain names has been fodder for numerous news reports, lawsuits, and the need for vigilant protection of a company's valuable trademarks through registration and enforcement in the ever growing list of gTlds, country code domains, and IDNs. Some of the many highlights of domain name developments that occurred or were reported in 2007 include:
- Sunrise period for registration of .ASIA domain names begins for trademark owners.
- ICANN begins testing of Internationalized Domain Names (IDNs) for gTLDs, represented by local language characters using scripts beyond ASCII characters, for 11 languages: Arabic, Persian, Chinese (simplified and traditional), Russian, Hindi, Greek, Korean, Yiddish, Japanese and Tamil. Comments are currently being accepted regarding the possible introduction of ccTLDs as IDNs, i.e. for the two-letter country codes currently used on the Internet to be provided in a non-Western alphabet.
- The Generic Names Supporting Organization, a committee of ICANN, preserves the public access to WHOIS information, while agreeing to initiate further studies regarding the legitimate uses and abuses of WHOIS data.
- Dell files suit against registrars BelguimDomains, CapitalDomains, DomainDoorman, and various alleged shell-registrants acting as fronts for the registrars, in an attempt to curtail "tasting" of domain names that are similar to or typos of Dell trademarks. In a novel attack on the cybersquatting activity, Dell characterizes the activity as counterfeiting, thereby potentially exposing the registrars and registrants to damages of up to one million dollars per violation, rather than a maximum of $100,000 per domain under federal cybersquatting laws.
- The Public Interest Registry, which manages the .ORG top-level name, attempts to combat domain name tasting by imposing a five-cent surcharge for registrars that deleted or dropped more than 90 percent of their registered domains after the five-day grace period for payment of registration fees. The change in policy resulted in the percentage of .ORG registered domain names that were dropped after the five-day grace period decreasing from nearly 92 percent to less than 30 percent.
- The National Arbitration Forum (NAF), one of the two main forums for bringing a UDRP action, amends its supplemental rules to allow a complainant to make arguments and present evidence in a UDRP complaint, when the complainant has reason to believe that a number of domain names are registered to a single entity or person, but under different aliases. This will allow a complainant to proceed against more than one listed registrant in the same UDRP complaint, if the linking of the alleged aliases can be proven.
- ccTLDs continue to grow in numbers, accounting for 36% of global domain name registrations. The largest ccTLD remains .de (Germany) in terms of total base of domain name registrations, as it approaches 12 million registrations, with .cn (China) and .uk (United Kingdom) as the next largest ccTLDs. These three ccTLDs, combined, account for 45% of all ccTLDs. The top ccTLDs with the largest growth include .cn, .ru (Russia), .de, .uk, .nl (Netherlands) and .eu (European Union).
With the continued increase of domain name registrations in new gTLDs and IDNs, the increase in popularity of ccTLDs, along with the always changing landscape of cybersquatting activity, there will continue to be a strong need for companies to strategize their domain name registration activities, while vigilantly monitoring and protecting their brands from domain name abuse in 2008.









Vol. 53, June 2010