ADOTAS — Naming rules originated from common sense, transformed into common laws, and later created the trademark philosophy to govern “naming” as a prime and civil component of businesses across the globe. This centuries-old thinking is almost like what electricity is to the Internet. Basically without the core component they are just useless. The current ICANN gTLD expansion now requires a worldwide awakening, particularly in the diverse domain-name industry that without well-balanced trademark rules, is basically headed toward disaster. ICANN is faced with major policy decisions whether to accept a name such as”.hotel” and later to allow someone else “.hotels”; surprisingly, there is support to allow both names, even to two different parties. This is bound to result legal battles.
Applying the same common sense, except for the rightful name owners we have never registered trademarks like Yahoos, Apples, Googles, Rolexes, Nikes, Guccies or Panasonics for others. Because common sense rejects the concept of “selling house-locks with Three Keys”; the buyer of lock gets two keys while the seller keeps the third key to be sold later to the highest bidder. Common sense created common laws to provide legitimacy to common-sense thinking.
Is ICANN’s gTLD “name selection process” doubtful whether ‘.hotel’ and ‘.hotels’ are one name or two buildings? Is it the fertilization of the bottom-up model that has created its own thick fog to avoid clarity? The rules of “similarity” in trademark process should provide that light.
Masters of Internet architecture and speculative domain trade are now expected to have some advance level knowledge of “naming rules.” Lawyers would be petrified to render bold and formal opinions on “Internet protocols” without having a certified education on the subject. The rhetoric coming from various corridors now must pass the acid test of hard core knowledge. If Internet architecture requires authoritative knowledge to manage the global circuitry, similarly the global nomenclature and naming architecture expects the same balance. At this late stage some dissection is critical. Here are the facts:
The world has already entered a new age digital marketing and branding and ICANN is the best global mother ship to the Internet protocols, but has yet to prove its global efficiency on naming complexities and trademark understanding. The original “first-come basis” chaos, UDRP explosion and defensive name registrations industry boom, all reflect on that reality.
The debate about singular vs. plural names must be resolved immediately in favor of common-sense rules as any further lingering will create the beginning of an endless tunnel where weak and abusive name selection policies will create chaos and only enrich conflicts. The name evaluation processes must become a solid foundation as the number of gTLDs in the second round would easily be tenfold. Otherwise, adjusting to every “similar, confusing or problematic naming” issue via bottom-up and top-down debates the name evaluation process would simply implode. ICANN needs clear decisions with singular policy and avoid not endless plural solutions.
Currently, a new gTLD under right combination is the cheapest and most powerful name identity expansion tool ever, but such endorsements are based on common-sense trademark rules to create long-term name identity and brand assets. If gTLDs were to be molded on”‘first come first” name snatch model mathematically a quick collapse of the entire gTLD system can be easily proven.
The awakening on this topic should start right away; currently what appears like a romantic tango dance between the Internet techies and guardians of “naming rules” is in reality a fierce bullfight. Olé! The time has come to take the bull by the horns. Adapted from adotas.com