• On The Insider: Robert Downey Jr Injured on the Set

February 1, 2000 3:55 PM PST

Coca-Cola objects to fan site domain

  • Print
In the latest David vs. Goliath dispute over Net name ownership, soft drink giant Coca-Cola has taken a hard-line approach with a fan site called "Vintagecocacola.com" that was established as a favor to a group of senior citizens.

Web site administrator Randy Martin of Maxistore.net said that the site originally was founded in a "goodwill gesture" as a place for Coca-Cola fans to display their collections of vintage Coca-Cola merchandise.

But on Jan. 5, Coca-Cola sent Maxistore a cease-and-desist letter asking the site to discontinue using the Coca-Cola trademark and to either assign the domain name to Coca-Cola or abandon the name immediately.

"I was completely shocked," Martin said in an interview. "Never in a million years did I dream they would be offended by a site that said great things about their products." He added that no merchandise was exchanged on the site and that no one was making money off the project.

The Coca-Cola dispute follows several others that have arisen since Congress passed anti-cybersquatting legislation in November that is designed to protect businesses from those who register company trademarks as Internet addresses in "bad faith" and try to sell them for profit. The cybersquatting law carves out exceptions for legitimate uses, however, such as a fan club that refers to an organization but does not use the trademarked name for profit.

Last week, online retailer eToys settled a domain name dispute with art group etoy--a case that critics of the cybersquatting law had watched closely, as they feared that the law would not do enough to protect small-business owners. In that case, the judge ruled in favor of the lesser-known company. Other recent disputes have involved the publishers of Teen Magazine, sports Web site Quokka.com and automaker Volkswagen of America.

A spokeswoman for Coca-Cola said the company sent the letter to Maxistore because any time it finds a Web site that uses the name "cocacola" in its domain, it must contact the site to protect its trademark if it doesn't want to lose the rights to it.

"We often have fan sites by people who like Coca-Cola; we don't have any problem with that," Kari Bjorhus, a Coca-Cola spokeswoman, said in an interview. But she said that the problem wasn't so much the content of the site as the fact that the name "cocacola" is part of the domain.

"If people see our trademark (in the domain), they may think we're responsible, and we can't monitor sites every day to see what could be on them," Bjorhus said. "If people have a negative experience going to the site...they might attribute that to us."

In Martin's letter to Coca-Cola, he states that he was careful to display on each page of the site a disclaimer that only genuine Coca-Cola merchandise was depicted and that the site did not claim ownership of the Coca-Cola name.

But Bjorhus said that it doesn't matter whether people have disclaimers on their sites, because it's not the content displayed but the domain name that's at issue.

And now, instead of a Coca-Cola fan site, Martin has turned Vintagecocacola into a discussion forum for domain name issues that includes a link to the Domain Name Rights Coalition and his written response to the cease-and-desist letter.

Bjorhus said the company isn't sure what steps it will take next, although it "is still concerned that Maxistore.net appears to be using the site to market its (Web) services."

"Certainly we don't have an interest in getting into some kind of protracted (situation)," she said, "but most people looking at the situation would understand that the company needs to protect its trademark."

Sally Abel, a partner with law firm Fenwick & West, said that under federal anti-dilution law, famous trademarks are protected from use by others--even when they're used in connection with unrelated goods. But for the Coca-Colas of the world to be protected by this law, they are expected to show that they've been actively policing use of their trademarks.

Thus, the question to ask is, Where do trademark owners' policing obligations stop?

"This sort of case is a public relations nightmare for Coca-Cola, as it is for many trademark owners," Abel said today. "They are obligated to protect their trademarks under the law, but they obviously don't want to upset their loyal fans, either.

"Coca-Cola made a choice that it's willing to suffer negative press in the short term for confidence that it has done everything it can to ensure its trademark rights are protected in the long term," she added.

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 2 comments
coca-cola-fans
by August 17, 2005 3:43 AM PDT
What about www.coca-cola-fans.com ?
Reply to this comment
coca-cola-fans
by August 17, 2005 3:43 AM PDT
What about www.coca-cola-fans.com ?
Reply to this comment

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Dow Jones Industrials (3.31%) 270.00 8,419.09
S&P 500 (3.99%) 32.60 848.81
NASDAQ (3.70%) 51.73 1,449.80
CNET TECH (3.64%) 36.93 1,051.13
  Symbol Lookup
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right
  • Business Tech

    IPOs a thing of the past?

    At AlwaysOn Venture Summit West conference, investment bankers, venture capitalists, and private equity players weigh in on the prognosis for the IPO market.

  • Gallery

    Photos: Space station marks a decade aloft

    The first pieces of the International Space Station went into orbit 10 years ago. Now a full-fledged lab facility, it continues to grow.

  • Security

    Apple deletes Mac antivirus suggestion

    Apple removes statement to customers urging them to use antivirus software, saying that Macs are safe "out of the box."

  • Beyond Binary

    Microsoft expands Vista SP2 testing

    Starting on Thursday, the software maker will make public a test version of the service pack update to Vista.

  • Video

    A toast to online wine A toast to online wine
  • Digital Media

    Conde Nast to shutter teen site Flip.com

    The teenage girl social-networking site plans to shut down on December 16, according to an e-mail sent to users.

  • Video

    Wi-Fi while you fly Wi-Fi while you fly
  • Gaming and Culture

    From Cy Young to video game fame

    Tim Lincecum, one of the best pitchers in baseball, was chosen to be the cover athlete for 2K Sports' next baseball game. On Tuesday, he did a motion-capture session for the game.

  • Green Tech

    Ta ta, Tesla

    Are the Valley-based VCs and big-wigs who back Tesla Motors really serious about asking the federal government for low-interest loans?

  • Gallery

    Photos: Top-rated reviews of the week

    Here are a few of CNET Reviews' favorite items from the past week, including Adobe suites, laptop bags, and a Panasonic flat panel TV.

  • The Download Blog

    Music and browsing take flight in Songbird

    Music and browsing mashup Songbird has kicked the remnants of its shell to the curb, and the program's main emphasis as a music browser couldn't be more clear.

  • Green Tech

    Ford accelerates electric-vehicle plans

    In its turnaround plan presented to Congress, Ford says it will invest billions in fuel efficiency and introduce a family of hybrid-electric and all-electric cars.