Dear Kim Appreciate your comments. What would make the approval of generic names fair is if those names that MelbourneIT have approved that should have been declined are also put out for auction. There seems something absolutely stupid and counter intuitive about effectively putting a company's name up for auction. The only fair system is to allow everyone to have their exact word(s) approved as their company as their domain name and you can abstract or expand on that core providing you don't infringe anyone else's lawful approval of the proposed name. If it is fair to abstract a name it is also fair that you should be able to expand a name. For example, if Mayne Logistics can claim the name logistics as a domain name by removing words from their lawful name, I should be able to add a word to my name - logistics - and claim maynelogistics.com.au. I am fed up with this argument that there is no property in a company name. There is goodwill in a business name and if you actually understand how the Govt treats the sale of small businesses it is clearly a case that it has a component of property. Also, proceeds of the sale of a company name are taxed and that suggests a property component in terms of value. Also, the cricket loving PM protected the property rights to the name Bradman by Regulation and this has been upheld by the Courts, so this also suggests that there is property in name. So, what is so special about the name Bradman? It should not be protected any more or less than the name of any other company or person, irrespective of size or position. Isn't that one of the fundamental axioms of our culture! Further, I have legal advice that I would probably succeed a claim for a common law trade mark as my company has been known only as Logistics since 1987 and has continuously traded under that name since incorporation. However, I can imagine the fine reading minutia that will result, meanwhile other names that should not have been approved by MelbourneIT are granted absolution. Is that fair - absolutely, definitely and emphatically no!!!! Rgds Adrian =========================================== Adrian Stephan (Managing Director) Logistics Pty Ltd POB 5068 PINEWOOD VIC 3149 Ph: +61 (0)3 9888 2366 Fx: +61 (0)3 9888 2377 akstephan§ozemail.com.au adrian.stephan§logistic.com.au www.logistic.com.au =========================================== -----Original Message----- From: Kim Davies [mailto:kim§cynosure.com.au] Sent: Friday, 14 December 2001 10:12 AM To: dns§lists.auda.org.au Subject: Re: [DNS] The Pending Introduction of .au DN Competiton Quoting Adrian Stephan on Friday December 14, 2001: | | This is an interesting concept and I suppose it might suit some. However, I | want the exact opposite. I want to be known by my company name - | logistics - and not some derivative of it. A couple of points: * If you want your domain name to be your exact company name, not some derivative, wouldn't you get logisticsptyltd.com.au? * You are equating domain names to the postal system, when that is not a very good parallel. auDA is a resource allocation agency much like the way the ACA allocates telephone numbers. Would you argument go so far that you should be allowed to have the phone number "111" on your whim? At no cost? In theory phone numbers don't cost anything, and are an unlimited resources, just like domain names. * The fact is, the naming panel have decided that the generic restriction should go, and that will happen. You might not like the allocation system (an auction if more than one person is entitled to a domain), but it is fair. kim --------------------------------------------------------------------------- List policy, unsubscribing and archives => http://www.auda.org.au/list/dns/ Please do not retransmit articles on this list without permission of the author, further information at the above URL. (329 subscribers.)Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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