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Microsoft has set its lawyers onto a 17-year-old software writer from Vancouver, called Mike Rowe, because he has registered MikeRoweSoft.com, which the company said infringes on its copyright.
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/0,39020330,39119181,00.htm
Rich
[edited by: lawman at 5:34 pm (utc) on Jan. 19, 2004]
[edit reason] adjust link [/edit]
They really don't have a case, and I can't believe the cheap jerks at M$ just won't give the kid the $1000 he wants for the name.
Now, in court, Microsoft can easily prove that the kid was using the domain to profit off of their name, and that he attempted to gouge ms for costs... and microsoft will win.
I took a look at the site this morning. If anyone thought that his site was Microsoft's, they have been hiding in a hole. He in no way affiliating himself with Microsoft. He does webdesign. If anything, M$ has done this child a favor. They made him into a David and I bet the kid will get a lot of new business from people who want to stick it to M$ in any way possible.
ms' lawyers knew what they were doing when they did that, and chances are, he's without a paddle up a rather smelly creek right now, based on a provable technicality
You can still see the google cache of his site.
M$ makes offer of ten bucks. Kid makes counter offer. Rather than negotiate in good faith, M$ puts its crack team of kid-busting lawyers on the case and cranks out a 25 page letter. Apparently the letter doesn't accuse the kid of any attempt at profiteering. Rather it explains why the his site could cause confusion to the detriment of M$.
HML believes the kid could win in court. Fiver thinks M$ has diabolically set the kid up for the suit of a lifetime, bad publicity be damned.
What is reality? Who knows. Even if the kid could win in court, who'll help him pay for it while M$ keeps the meter running?
On the other hand, why would M$ spend thousands more on attorneys and legal fees when they could settle for much less than $10K? Would they do it just for meanness and bad publicity? Probably not.
My prediction: The kid'll sell the domain name for much less than $10K.
lawman
Pretty soon you are going to see Microsoft lawyers in the maternity ward. Im sorry, you cannot name your kid Mike Row, as it will be construed as a dilution of the companies name,
unless you sign this waiver, saying that your baby will never take up a profession as a computer software engineer, or related profession :)
Update:It appears that the site is down. The CNN story probably overloaded the ISP. Maybe the 10K will pay for bandwidth used.
There was a similar story in the UK about 3 years ago. A guy had registered MikeOSoft.com. They didn't offer him anything (not even the $10). A lawyer sponsered him for free (publicity rules) and he won. Now a very rich man.
I'll try and dig out the links. I followed this very closely.
atob.c
diabolically set the kid up for the suit of a lifetime, bad publicity be damned.
I think they intentionally set it up so that they had documented evidence of the kid's intention to get money for the domain from m$. Set up of a technicality. They already got a load of bad publicity for ever bringing it up... if it were about PR they would have never conacted him, no?
Too bad about the technicality. Still, if M$ should win
a court case here it can only be a black eye for them.
All the philanthropy in the world isn't worth squat if
you're still a mean-spirited, money-grubbing corporation.
Just my opinion.
grandpa
"We take our trademark seriously, but in this case maybe a little too seriously," the company said in a statement issued Tuesday afternoon."That said, we appreciate that Mike Rowe is a young entrepreneur who came up with a creative domain name. We are currently in the process of resolving this matter in a way that will be fair to him and satisfy our obligations under trademark law."
Whole story is here:
[cnn.com...]
Seems like the kid has made a deal with another web design company. In hindsight M$ would have been better off leaving this thing alone.