ICANN and Top IP Headlines

As expected, Monday the Board of Directors of ICANN approved a proposal to add hundreds and possibly thousands of new generic top level domains (gTLDs) to the Internet. The proposal has been years in the making, and the 400-page Draft Applicant Guidebook that describes it has undergone seven major revisions. SIIA believes that the decision to approve the Guidebook represents a significant threat to copyright owners. Intellectual property owners will need to familiarize themselves quickly with the Rights Protection Mechanisms in the gTLD Applicant Guidebook, and expend even more resources and time in enforcing their rights against cybersquatters and infringers.

 

Top Headlines:

1.) Video Head-to-Head: Newspapers vs. PRs & Meltwater (paidContent.org)
In November, a UK High Court held that operators and customers of paid digital news monitor services should pay newspapers for crawling their stories. Months later, the parties gathered at a debate to discuss the future of content.

2.) John Steinbeck Heirs Lose Bid for Supreme Court to Hear Copyright Dispute (Fox News)
The Supreme Court denied further review of a legal dispute over publication rights to many of Steinbeck’s legendary works in a case brought by Steinbeck’s only surviving son and sole grandchild.

3.) Barclay, BofA Can’t Block Flyonthewall.com Reports on Stocks, Court Rules (Bloomberg)
A federal appeals court in a ruling Monday clarified the law governing the publication of hot news, overturning a lower court ruling that blocked Theflyonthewall.com from reporting the upgrades or downgrades of stocks for two hours or until half an hour after the opening of the NYSE.

4.) Oracle Seeking Billions in Damages From Google in Android Patent Infringement Suit (paidContent.org)
Oracle announced it is seeking billions in damages from Google in a suit over whether the Android operating system infringes patents Oracle bought from Sun Microsystems.

5.) Bloggers Mull Legal Action Against Righthaven (Wired)
Former Righthaven defendants who settled with them are now mulling their legal options after a judge ruled that Righthaven did not have legal standing to bring such lawsuits.