ICANN Update: Changes to the gTLD Evaluation Process, Comment Deadline is Extended, and More

SIIA has been tracking the details of how new generic top level domains (gTLDs) will operate under ICANN’s new program to expand the number of gTLDs, with an eye toward intellectual property rights protection mechanisms, Whois database implementation, and other considerations. There have been many new developments since ICANN announced the 1,930 applications for new top level domains. Here’s the latest:

Changes to the gTLD Evaluation Process
ICANN’s original plan to “batch” applications into groups of 500 for prioritizing evaluation is dead. All 1930 applications will be part of a single, initial evaluation for technical and financial capability, with all results announced at the end of that process. In lieu of batching, ICANN apparently will use some “metering” process for handling the applications, but at this time we are not clear on what such a metering process would entail.

Comments on new gTLD applications extended
The deadline for submitting comments on the new gTLDs to the ICANN evaluation panels was postponed by ICANN until September 26th. SIIA will be filing comments on many of the applied-for strings at that time.

ICANN Names New CEO
New ICANN CEO, Fadi Chehade, will take office in October (until then, current COO Akram Attalah will be CEO).

Cost of Take Down Process Examined
ICANN announced that it would convene a group to seek possible alternatives to the Uniform Rapid Suspension System (URS), in light of the providers’ (WIPO, ICC and ICDR) statements that they cannot do it for $300 per complaint as promised in the Guidebook. The URS is intended to be a cheap, quick take down process for brand owners to file a claim against a domain and have it taken down (much like WIPO’s existing UDRP). In response, several gTLD applicants stated that they would implement their own URS if ICANN failed to provide one by the time they were ready to launch. Others applicants suggested that ICANN should fund any difference in cost out of the $350 million in gTLD application fees it recently collected.

Timing of new gTLDs
Due to several delays and complications, the new gTLD evaluation and comment/objection process will extend well into 2013, and likely 2014 for some contested applications. As a result, new gTLDs will likely not go “live” until at least mid to late 2013. (Some reasons for the delay include: the GAC has informed the ICANN Board that it will not be ready to issue “Consensus Advice” on any applications until April 2013 – thus presumably no applications will be formally approved before then. Also, as mentioned above, ICANN’s announcement of anticipated cost overruns of the URS trademark enforcement tool, as well as the Trademark Clearinghouse, prompted some members of the ICANN community, notably the registries and registrars, to call for alternatives or, in the case of the Trademark Clearinghouse, ability to participate in technical development. New gTLDs cannot launch until these issues are resolved.).

ICANN Awarded IANA Contract
On July 2, the U.S. Commerce Department’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) announced that it has awarded the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) Functions Contract to the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). This is not a new role for ICANN, which manages the current IANA Functions Contract that is set to expire on September 30, 2012. The contract will run from October 1, 2012 to September 30, 2015, and has two 2-year option periods, for a total contract period of seven years.


Keith Kupferschmid is General Counsel and SVP, Intellectual Property Policy & Enforcement at SIIA.

This Week in IP Enforcement

Pirated mobile Android and Apple apps getting hacked, cracked and smacked (Network World)
Arxan study claims 90% of top 100 paid Android and iOS apps ending up criminalized in hackers’ hands

Federal Courts Order Seizure of Three Website Domains Involved in Distributing Pirated Android Cell Phone Apps (DOJ Criminal Division)
First Time Website Domains Involving Cell Phone App Marketplaces Are Seized

Plagiarism, defamation and the power of hyperlinks (GIGAOM)
If Fareed Zakaria and Jonah Lehrer had spent more time linking to the original sources of content they used in their writing, they wouldn’t have faced accusations of plagiarism. Their cases and a recent defamation lawsuit against Gawker Media help reinforce the value of the hyperlink.

Germany: Google book deal violates copyright law (Reuters)
Google Inc’s plan to digitize millions of books would violate German copyright law and the country’s privacy protections for Internet users, the German government said in a U.S. court filing.

Google: We are so over patents, especially in their current form (The Washington Post)
After fighting the patent battle of the decade in court with Oracle, Googlers are getting publicly fed up with software patents as a whole. Conceptually, they just don’t jive with innovation, two prominent Googlers have said recently.

Apple, Samsung patent case headed to jury (The Washington Post)
The much-watched patent case between Apple and Samsung is headed to jury, after executives failed to agree on a resolution in a final phone conference.


Keith Kupferschmid is General Counsel and SVP, Intellectual Property Policy & Enforcement at SIIA.

This Week in IP Enforcement

Apple claims in huge patent case that Samsung copied iPhone technology introduced by Jobs (Associated Press)
On Tuesday afternoon, the Apple designer, Christopher Stringer, wrapped up the first day of testimony in a closely watched patent trial proudly discussing his accomplishments in support of his employer’s lawsuit alleging Samsung Electronics Co. ripped off Apple’s technology to market its own products.

Online software piracy – Head in the clouds (TheEconomist)
As more people use “cloud computing” services like webmail and do word-processing via a browser, software makers fret that today’s software piracy will migrate to the cloud too.

Attorney General Kamala D. Harris Announces Sentencing in eCrime Software Piracy Case (State of California Dept. of Justice)
Attorney General Kamala D. Harris announced that Michael Anthony Gomez, Jr., 55, of Capitola, was sentenced in Santa Cruz Superior Court to 16 months in jail after pleading guilty to one count of selling pirated software.

Hooper report plans UK copyright registry (Intellectual Property Magazine)
The UK could see a not-for-profit, industry-led ‘copyright hub’ that includes a copyright registry, in recommendations made by Richard Hooper in his report tackling digital copyright and infringement.

Megaupload Lawyers Ask for Judge to Restore Business (IDG News)
Lawyers for Megaupload have asked Judge O’Grady to dismiss the criminal case because the DOJ seized the Hong Kong company’s website and assets without serving it with the charges.

Microsoft to Motorola: The way to ‘patent peace’ (CNET)
Microsoft’s lawyers pen a public note to Motorola suggesting a route to peace in the ongoing patent saga.


Keith Kupferschmid is General Counsel and SVP, Intellectual Property Policy & Enforcement at SIIA.

This Week in IP Enforcement

Craigslist Sues PadMapper, 3Taps Over Listings (PCMag)
In a complaint filed last week, Craigslist alleged that apartment-hunting sites PadMapper and 3Taps are unlawfully repurposing Craigslist postings, and therefore undermining “the integrity of local Craigslist communities.”

Internet Defense League Launches as Policy Watchdogs (CBS News)
The Internet Defense League, a new activist group including such members as Rep. Darrell Issa and organizations like WordPress, Mozilla, and Electronic Frontier Foundation, officially launched last week to act as online policy watchdogs against potential bills that may threaten Internet freedom.

In China, Why Piracy is Here to Stay (Forbes)
Why intellectual property protection will always be an uphill struggle in China and for companies doing business there.

Three Strikes Law Halves Internet Piracy in New Zealand With No Prosecutions, Yet (Digital Trends)
A controversial three strikes law to curb Internet piracy is being viewed as a success in New Zealand, but the industry appears to want a reduction in costs before it will prosecute offenders.


Keith Kupferschmid is General Counsel and SVP, Intellectual Property Policy & Enforcement at SIIA.

This Week in IP Enforcement

U.S. ICE Seizes 70 More Websites For Alleged Copyright Infringement (PCWorld)
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has seized 70 websites accused of selling products that infringe copyright. The seized sites “closely mimicked legitimate websites selling authentic merchandise and duped consumers into unknowingly buying counterfeit goods,” ICE said in a press release.

File-Hosting Firms Responsible for Pirated Content, German Court Rules (ZDNet)
Germany’s federal court of law has ruled that online file-hosting services are at least partly responsible for the contents of the files on their servers.

Canada Supreme Court Ends Royalties for Music Downloads (Reuters)
As part of five copyright rulings last week, Canada’s Supreme Court scrapped some fees for music downloads, ruled that previews of songs in online digital stores are not an infringement and do not merit royalty payments, and also ruled in favor of teachers who photocopy excerpts from textbooks for classroom instruction.

FBI Expands Availability of Anti-Piracy Warning Seal (PC Magazine)
The FBI is expanding its anti-piracy seal program to allow the general public to access and use the seal on copyrighted works.

France: Google May Have to Censor for Piracy After All (GigaOM)
France’s Supreme Court has set aside a critical piracy ruling that they say actually violated a key clause of the country’s rules on intellectual property. The move may force Google to censor some of its search results.


Keith Kupferschmid is General Counsel and SVP, Intellectual Property Policy & Enforcement at SIIA.

This Week in IP Enforcement

Enforcement News

Nigeria: Firm Fights Software Piracy in Nigeria (Daily Trust)
Software developers lose millions of naira annually to software thefts. In Nigeria, software pirating is a huge industry, the bulk of which occur at Alaba International Market, Lagos.

Colombo Crimes Division raids banking firm for software piracy (dailymirror.lk)
The Sri Lanka Police re-affirmed its focused determination to the task of protecting intellectual property (IP) rights, when it carried out yet another copyright enforcement raid.

IP Policy News

European Parliament overwhelmingly rejects ACTA anti-piracy pact (The Washington Post)
The European Parliament overwhelmingly defeated an international anti-piracy trade agreement Wednesday after concern that it would limit Internet freedom sparked street protests in cities across Europe.

NZ court finds Megaupload search warrants illegal (Reuters)
Search warrants used when 70 New Zealand police raided the mansion of the suspected kingpin of an Internet piracy ring were illegal, a New Zealand court ruled on Thursday, dealing a blow to the FBI’s highest profile global copyright theft case.

Judge who shelved Apple trial says patent system out of sync (Reuters)
The U.S. judge who tossed out one of the biggest court cases in Apple Inc’s (AAPL.O) smartphone technology battle is questioning whether patents should cover software or most other industries at all.

EU Court OKs Resale of Software Licenses (Associated Press)
The ruling comes in a case brought by California-based software maker Oracle against UsedSoft, a German company that resells software licenses, and it could have broad implications for the digital industry.


Keith Kupferschmid is General Counsel and SVP, Intellectual Property Policy & Enforcement at SIIA.

This Week in IP Enforcement

White House Seeks New IP Strategy, House Holds Hearing on Patents

On the two-year anniversary of the Administration’s Joint Strategic Plan on Intellectual Property Enforcement, Federal IP Enforcement Coordinator Victoria Espinel on Monday announced that the administration is developing a new strategy for IP enforcement, and seeking input. In the announcement Espinel indicated that recommendations may include, but need not be limited to: legislation, regulation, guidance, executive order, Presidential memoranda, or other executive action, including, but not limited to, changes to agency policies, practices or methods. She also said that the administration is looking for information on and recommendations for combating emerging or future threats to American innovation and economic competitiveness posed by violations of intellectual property rights.

Also on the IP front, the House Judiciary Sbcmte. on Competition and the Internet will hold a hearing today on Protecting Patents, Trade Secrets and Market Access. Teresa Stanek Rea, the Deputy Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and PTO Deputy Director is the key witness.

Enforcement News

Pinterest Gives Copyright Credit to Etsy, Kickstarter, SoundCloud (Mashable)
Amidst the legal debate surrounding copyrighted content on Pinterest, the popular site made efforts to automatically add citations to content from specific sources including Flickr, YouTube, Vimeo, Etsy, and others.

MegaUpload Pushes Court to Dismiss Criminal Copyright Case (PCWorld)
MegaUpload filed a court brief asking a judge to decide next week whether to dismiss criminal copyright infringement charges, contending that they were never served a criminal summons.

Miami Heat Owner Sues Google, Blogger Over ‘Unflattering’ Photo (paidContent)
A minority owner of the Miami Heat filed a copyright suit against a blogger for posting a photo of him, and is also suing Google for refusing to take the photo down.

Las Vegas Man Given Prison Sentence in San Jose Court for Software Piracy (San Jose Mercury News)
A Las Vegas man convicted of one count of criminal copyright infringement has been sentenced to two years in prison, and ordered to pay $247,144 in restitution for illegally copying Adobe software and selling it on the Internet.


Keith Kupferschmid is General Counsel and SVP, Intellectual Property Policy & Enforcement at SIIA.