Virtual Real Estate - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Virtual Real Estate

Description:

Virtual Real Estate – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:94
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: gardalexan
Category:
Tags: co | ebay | ebaycouk | estate | real | uk | virtual

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Virtual Real Estate


1
Virtual Real Estate
Jeremiah Johnston, COO/General Counsel Kathryn
Farooqui, Director of Marketing Sedo.com, LLC
2
Virtual Real Estate for the Online Frontier
  • Reminiscent of the land rush days of the wild
    west, the domain name industry began fast and
    furious. While some bandits chose to ignore the
    laws of the physical world, most recognized the
    legitimate opportunities to jump in on the ground
    floor of a nascent industry.
  • Fast forward ten years and virtual real estate
    has evolved into an industry worth close to 2
    billion annually. Every day, ordinary people and
    companies are buying, selling and developing
    Internet properties.

3
Section 1 Domains as Virtual Real Estate
  • Today the domain name industry is experiencing a
    rush of investment capital from publicly traded
    companies, private equity firms, venture
    capitalists and individuals all centered around
    the idea of domain names as virtual real estate.
  • Even traditional real estate investment models
    have been updated for the new economy with the
    formation of companies such as iReit, a
    Houston-based developer of domain names.
  • iREIT purchases domain names and then enhances
    their valuation through increasing the volume of
    site traffic, improving its brand-ability and
    enhancing the website's capacity to generate
    revenue. iReit.com

4
  • Like the rental value of an investment property,
    natural internet traffic commands a premium
    price. While Google has turned the corporate
    world upside down with the simplicity of its
    advertising model, other companies realized that
    the concept of direct navigation would open
    another avenue to benefit from the Google model.
  • Much has been made about click fraud in the
    pay-per-click industry but natural traffic is a
    real and staggering phenomenon of user behavior.
    Millions of people online rely on direct
    navigation to reach their Internet destinations.
    By directly typing a generic or descriptive
    domain name into their browser, they are
    confident that they will land on a website
    catering to that interest.

5
Utilizing Direct Navigation to Capture
Consumer-Driven Web Traffic
  • Example
  • Wifi.com averages 15k unique natural visitors
    each month.
  • Traffic through pay-per-click program costs
    nearly 16,800 per month.
  • 16,800k x 12 201,600 annually
  • Purchasing the domain approximately 350k
  • Domain pays for itself within two years

Based on the current bid price of 1.12 for the
term wifi on the Google network.
6
  • Why is traffic from direct navigation relevant?
    Compare below the conversion ratio for
    advertisements located on a search engine results
    page and advertisements located on a domain
    accessed via direct navigation

Direct Navigation 4.23
Search Engines 2.3
7
  • All of this activity has led to a sharp and
    stable climb in the number of domain names being
    bought and sold on marketplaces such as Sedo
    everyday.
  • The domain name industry is a model of the new
    economy. Investors range from widowers in
    Connecticut to entrepreneurs in the United
    Kingdom to corporations from Japan to Manhattan.
  • A look on the next slide of annual sales that
    illustrates the rise in market activity.

8
Sedos Annual Secondary Domain Market Growth
9
  • Like a piece of land with unique physical
    characteristics, each domain has a value equally
    unique. This can be seen from the variety of
    sales by price range in the next slide.
  • Domains that are short, memorable, descriptive
    and attached to a well known and popular top
    level domain (TLD) such as .com, .net, .co.uk,
    .de, etc., are worth more than their lengthy and
    unknown counterparts.

10
Domain sales according to TLD
11
  • Sedo alone has a membership base of more than
    850,000 domain professionals in over 240
    countries and Sedo has helped hundreds of
    thousands of businesses start their Web presence
    off on the right foot with a great domain name.
  • And its not just .com! Recent sales show that
    even country-code top-level domains (ccTLDs) are
    commanding premium prices. For example
  • Chat.de 470,848
  • Mobile.co.uk 255,554
  • Auto.es 148,181
  • Auto.fr 134,710
  • One.es 117,197

12
Secondary Market TLD Sales
13
Secondary Market ccTLD Volume
14
Section 2 The Value of Domains to Businesses
and Individuals
  • In an online world, if you want to have your
    voice heard or customers to find your door,
    owning the right domain name is a necessary
    asset.
  • Whether the use is commercial in nature, intended
    for family and friends, or your outlet for
    expression, your domain name helps define your
    website before the page has even loaded.
  • With the exception of domains that contain
    offensive or illegal subject matter, every domain
    name has a potential legitimate use.

15
  • Free and open speech online can only be assured
    when there is the free trade of domain names
    replenishing the public domain as vehicles of
    expression.
  • Trademark infringement may get all of the
    attention, but fair use provisions of
    intellectual property laws are equally important
    as these limitations are designed to protect the
    non-commercial use of terms even if they contain
    protected content. IP protection is not absolute
    and its limitations must be enforced in harmony
    with an trademark owners right to exclude.

16
  • Legitimate commercial use of domain names must
    also be protected. Once a domain is acquired,
    however, commercial use should not automatically
    warrant a right to exclude similar domain names
    when the terms are generic, descriptive or overly
    suggestive.
  • While the upcoming amendments to U.S.
    anti-dilution laws will provide a more
    predictable definition of famous marks, the
    standards for achieving secondary meaning must
    also be more narrowly defined. Failure to do so
    will only result in needless litigation in
    regards to descriptive domains.

17
  • A company can still take advantage of
    descriptive, laudatory, or suggestive terms
    without asking to cloak the terms in unjustified
    trademark rights.

Generic
Descriptive
Suggestive
Arbitrary
Fanciful
No Protection
Less Protection
Most Protection
18
  • Domain names are powerful means for companies to
    draw traffic to branded websites by acquiring the
    descriptive or generic terms describing the goods
    or services they provide. For example
  • Books.com
  • PC.com
  • Loans.com
  • RentalCar.com

19
Section 3 Responsible use of Domain Names
  • Just as the owner of physical real estate is
    potentially liable for uses of the land that harm
    the rights of others, owners of virtual real
    estate must constrain their use of a domain to
    uses that do the same.
  • While trademark rights get most of the attention
    when it comes to harmful uses of domain names, a
    wide variety of potential uses may harm other
    rights associated with statutory or common law.

20
  • While trademark rights get most of the attention
    when it comes to harmful uses of domain names, a
    wide variety of potential uses may harm other
    rights associated with statutory or common law.
  • Neutral providers of marketplaces such as eBay
    and Sedo have published guidelines and policies
    prohibiting the use of their services in ways
    likely to infringe the rights of a third party.
  • eBays VeRO program and Sedos Rights Protection
    Program offer rights owners an easy to use and
    transparent procedure for alerting the companies
    of potential infringing uses and requesting
    removal of suspicious listings.

21
  • Unfortunately, the negative uses of domain names
    often receive more attention than the wide
    variety of legal uses, whether those uses are
    based on traditional business methods or taking
    advantage of technological advances.
  • This has led to a legal environment where domain
    owners who lack the intent to infringe the rights
    of non-famous trademarks lose their domains
    before arbitration panels inherently skeptical of
    anyone who buys and sells domain names.

22
  • The World Intellectual Property Organization
    (WIPO) is one of the few arbitration
    organizations accredited to hear domain name
    disputes by the Internet Corporation For Assigned
    Names and Numbers (ICANN).
  • Despite its role as a neutral arbitrator in
    disputes between trademark holders and domain
    owners, WIPO released a press release in January
    2006 congratulating itself on the number of
    disputes it had ruled on behalf of complainants.
  • Press Release
  • Commentary

23
  • This is best illustrated when looking at the
    patterns in disputes heard under the Uniform
    Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP),
    where the key factors are often legitimate use
    and bad faith registration.
  • To win a complaint, a trademark owner must prove
  • (i) the domain name at issue is identical or
    confusingly similar to a trademark or service
    mark in which the complainant has rights and
  • (ii) the domain owner has no rights or legitimate
    interests in the domain name at issue and
  • (iii) the domain name at issue was registered and
    used in bad faith.

24
  • While the text of the UDRP includes non-exclusive
    lists of circumstances to guide the trademark
    specialist assigned as the panelist for the
    complaint, more than 7,000 decisions have shown a
    pattern of panelists interpreting legitimate use
    narrowly and bad faith broadly.
  • Such a pattern has the potential to chill
    innovation and makes broad assumptions in regards
    to the reach of niche or regional trademarks.
  • WIPO Overview of WIPO Panel Views on Selected
    UDRP Questions

25
Section 5 Need for Effective Legal
Representation
  • With the extraordinary levels of investment in
    the domain name industry, effective and zealous
    legal representation has become critical.
  • Areas where legal services are needed include
  • Counseling portfolio owners on how to navigate
    the complex world of international trademark law.
  • Reviewing and drafting purchase and sale
    agreements
  • Reviewing and drafting partnership agreements
  • Defending UDRP complaints and claims of
    infringement

26
Thank You!
Sedo GmbH Im Mediapark 6 50670
Cologne Germany Tel 49 (0)221 420 758
279 Fax 49 (0)221 420 758 11 eMail legal_at_sedo.
co.uk
  • Sedo.com, LLC
  • 161 First St.
  • Cambridge, MA 02142
  • USA
  • Tel 1 (617) 499-7200
  • Fax 1 (617) 499-7203
  • eMail legal_at_sedo.com
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com