: Domain names ending with book I want to make a humorsite, not a social network, but a humorsite. But my domain name ends with book. Do you think Facebook would make a fuss about it?
I want to make a humorsite, not a social network, but a humorsite. But my domain name ends with book.
Do you think Facebook would make a fuss about it?
More posts by @Murray155
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So far, the answers I've read on this post are
certainly not correct. Facebook will likely come
after you with a vengenace and take your domain
in court if it has aWordBook.com.
I say this based on the many court proceedings
that I have observed and read about concerning
Facebook's legal dept.
They are aggressive as they get, and sadly if they
chose to fight-you will likely lose! There was a
very interesting article in techdirt.com about this
topic just recently.
Check out this article I think you will find it very
insightful if not shocking.
www.techdirt.com/articles/20110803/16453315382/could-facebook-lose-its-facebook-trademark-after-being-too-aggressive-trademark-bullying.shtml
There was a similar case in the UK over the prefix "Easy" by the owner of EasyJet etc, who was setting up his EasyEmpire.
In that case I believe he won the domain arbitration because the owners of EasyPizza had chosen an orange and white colour scheme that "was likely to cause confusion". So while he doesn't own the rights to start a combined word starting with "Easy", he did own the brand of "Easy combined with Orange and White, etc."
It will be interesting when the FB case actually comes to court - but the different jurisdictions weaken the parallels - EasyGroup had already started a number of companies called "Easy...", while Facebook is claiming Brand Dilution.
There's a reason why a lot of sites use crazy made up names rather than names with common words like "book" or "bay" that a popular site already uses in part. It avoids the problem entirely and allows easy and defendable trademarking.
While they might not go after you, you'll be living on the edge of a volcano should they become overly litigious like some companies do. Also, while you may have a strong case against them, you will still have to defend yourself in court and that can be very costly. Large corporations often count on this high legal cost to force ordinary folks to give up domains.
I assume you're asking because of the TeachBook lawsuit.
Overall they'd only have a claim if you're in the same industry, very roughly defined as the vague "social networking," or are willfully misleading people into thinking that there's an association between you two. So as a person who's not your or anyone else's lawyer, you're probably fine. But if you plan on adding features any more social than about standard commenting, you might want to be careful.
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