Sex.com
The Internet domain
name sex.com is a web portal owned by Escom LLC.
It was the focus of one of the most publicized legal actions
about ownership of domain names.
History
In 1994, entrepreneur Gary
Kremen (now the CEO of Grant Media, LLC) registered
the domain with Network Solutions (NSI). He did not develop
a site.
In October 1995 NSI transferred the domain
to Stephen M. Cohen. Cohen had been trying to gain control
of the domain for some time by misrepresentation, using
phone calls, e-mails and forged letters. He eventually persuaded
an employee of NSI to change the ownership details, apparently
through a fake fax, although this was not entirely clear
during most of the legal proceedings that followed.
After gaining control of the domain, Cohen developed it,
producing an advertising-heavy site which gained up to 25
million hits a day. From payments for click-throughs and
other advertising it was reported that Cohen was making
$50,000 to $500,000 every month.
Kremen undertook steps to recover the domain, but found
it extremely difficult. Cohen claimed he obtained the domain
legally from Online Classifieds (OCI), and a five-year legal
battle ensued, led by cyberlawyer Charles Carreon. Kremen
was victorious in November 2000, when Network Solutions
was ordered to return the domain to Kremen and Cohen was
ordered to pay $25 million into court.
In April 2001 the Californian District Court awarded Kremen
an additional $40 million for lost earnings, for a total
of $65 million. Cohen appealed the judgement and refused
to allow assessment of his business - providing false information
or none at all, declaring most of his companies bankrupt
and illegally moving assets out of US jurisdiction. When
an arrest warrant was issued, Cohen fled the country to
Mexico. Kremen offered a $50,000 reward for information,
but Cohen remained uncaught. Cohen continued to file appeals
but they were rapidly rejected. In October 2005, Cohen was
arrested in Tijuana, Mexico for immigration violations,
and was handed over to US authorities.
VeriSign lawsuit
In 1998 Kremen began simultaneous legal proceedings against
Network Solutions, later part of VeriSign, for breach of
contract and conversion. The case was repeatedly delayed
before his claim was dismissed by the trial court in May
2000, holding that since the registration was free, Kremen
had no contract with Network Solutions, and that the doctrine
of conversion (dealing improperly with another's property)
did not apply because domain names are not tangible property.
Kremen appealed. The 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals held
in July 2003 that domains were property protected by the
doctrine of conversion, and that VeriSign could be liable
to Kremen for improperly transferring the domain. The case
was remanded to the trial court on this basis. In March
2004 VeriSign ended the legal action and paid Kremen an
undisclosed sum, believed to be around $20 million.
External links
This article is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the
Wikipedia
article "Ddoman_hijacking Sex.com".
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