From the .XXX Files: Porn Industry Giants Sue Over New Domain Name Registry

The .xxx domain name registry was approved by ICANN and is now taking applications via your friendly neighborhood domain name registrar, so you would be forgiven for thinking that opponents of the .xxx domain are ready to move on and deal with the new regime.

To the contrary, pornography giants Manwin Licensing International (operator of YouPorn, Pornhub, xTube, and the various Playboy websites) and Digital Playground (one of the five biggest pornography studios, according to Wikipedia) are decidedly not aroused amused by ICM Registry and its .xxx starlet. The two companies filed suit last week against ICM Registry, ICANN, and a few Does in the United States District Court for the Central District of California alleging, in primary part, claims for antitrust violations under the Sherman Act and unfair competition under California law. The plaintiffs aver that ICANN and ICM Registry “knowingly conspired to eliminate competitive bidding and competition in the markets for certain .XXX TLD registry services, with the intent to injure competition and consumers.”

The complaint (PDF) alleges that “ICANN awarded ICM [the .xxx] contract without soliciting or accepting competing bids,” thus awarding ICM Registry with monopoly control and “free reign to impose anti-competitive prices and practices.” It explains that owners of trademarks and of other top-level domains are forced to avail themselves of defensive or blocking .xxx domain name registrations to prevent others from registering or using those same names in the.xxx TLD. It claims that the market for blocking services or defensive registrations constitutes “a distinct and separate market,” and that ICM Registry -- by virtue of its registry agreement with ICANN -- has a complete monopoly over this market. Finally, it alleges a variety of anti-competitive practices adopted by ICANN, such as “charging…supra-competitive, monopoly prices for name blocking services,” and that this pricing structure is “far higher than that which would exist in a competitive market, and so constitutes an unreasonable restraint on trade and also harms competition.” The plaintiffs point out that the pricing for general availability registrations is similarly anti-competitive.

The plaintiffs ask for preliminary and permanent injunctive relief including, “for example,” enjoining the .xxx TLD altogether, ordering “that the .xxx registry contract be rebid to introduce competition,” “and/or imposing reasonable price constraints and service requirements on affirmative registrations in the .XXX TLD.”

It is important to note that the .xxx domain is the result of a lengthy and controversial process entirely unrelated to ICANN’s New gTLD Program, and that a sizeable portion (if not the majority) of the actual adult entertainment industry was vocally opposed to the .xxx registry throughout that process.  Among other differences, the New gTLD Program will feature competitive bidding on desirable TLDs, and accordingly it is unclear whether future legal challenges, which are surely in the cards for ICANN and its future registry partners, will be so reliant on antitrust theories. I expect we will find out soon enough. In the meantime, it will be interesting to see whether other adult entertainment companies emerge to challenge ICANN and ICM Registry over .xxx.

Update: .XXXempt Your Valuable Brands Starting September 7

In May, we reported that brand owners would have the opportunity to "block" domain names in the .xxx top-level domain registry that correspond to valuable brands. This opt-out opportunity will be available beginning September 7, 2011 during the "Sunrise B" phase of the .xxx rollout, and trademark owners concerned about their marks used in connection with .xxx domain names should consider participating.

The .XXX Launch

The .xxx launch consists of several phases, as follows:

Sunrise. The .xxx sunrise phase actually involves two concurrent phases -- Sunrise A and Sunrise B. Sunrise A is for applicants within the adult Sponsored Community that own trademark registrations or already provide adult entertainment services via an existing domain name. Sunrise B is for owners of registered trademarks seeking to reserve .xxx domain names to keep them from being used in connection with adult websites. The dueling sunrise periods will go from September 7, 2011 to October 28, 2011.

Landrush. During the Landrush phase, members of the adult Sponsored Community can apply for .xxx domain names at a premium to avoid the first come, first served nature of the General Availability phase. Competing applications for a single name will be determined via auction. Landrush goes from November 8, 2011 to November 25, 2011.

General Availability. Beginning on December 6, 2011, during the General Availability phase any member of the adult Sponsored Community can apply to register .xxx domains on a first come, first served basis, and IP owners that did not have prior qualifying rights under Sunrise A or B can apply to register "non-resolving" domain names.

Sunrise B Reservations

During Sunrise B, trademark owners can reserve .xxx domain names that correspond to trademarks that are the subject of most U.S. or foreign registrations issued prior to September 1, 2011. The domain name must correspond to the entire text of a registered mark -- e.g., disney.xxx, but not dizney.xxx or disneythemeparks.xxx. If approved, the domain name will resolve to a standard informational page reflecting the status of the name as reserved. Sunrise B reservation will require a one-time fee set by individual registrars (expected to be between $200 and $400), and reservation will be permanent, without the need for annual renewal fees.

As Sunrise A and Sunrise B occur concurrently, there is the distinct possibility that a member of the adult Sponsored Community and a trademark owner will apply for the same .xxx domain -- the former to use in connection with an adult website, and the latter to reserve as permanently non-resolving. In this case, the domain name will go to the qualified Sunrise A applicant, and the Sunrise A applicant will also receive notice of the trademark owner's interest in the reserving the domain name. Thus, the Sunrise A applicant will register the domain name, but cannot claim lack of notice in a subsequent dispute between the Sunrise A and Sunrise B applicant.

Post-Sunrise Trademark Protections

Once the General Availability phase begins, trademark owners who were not eligible for Sunrise B, or who wish to defensively register domain names that did not qualify for Sunrise B, can register standard non-resolving domain names at regular prices (probably about $100 each). The domains, unlike Sunrise B reservations, are subject to annual renewals.

ICM Registry has also implemented several dispute resolution procedures, including the Charter Eligibility Dispute Resolution Procedure (CEDRP), used if the .xxx domain is operated by someone outside of the adult Sponsored Community, the Rapid Evaluation Service (RES), used for clear cybersquatting of well-known brands and personal names, and the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP), for remaining cybersquatting situations.

Of course, because use of a trademark as or as part of a .xxx domain is not per se cybersquatting, and because identical trademarks can happily coexist where there is no likelihood of consumer confusion, trademark owners would be well advised to take advantage of the Sunrise B reservations and General Availability defensive registrations to protect key trademarks.

Additional Information

More information regarding the .xxx rollout is available at ICM Registry's website. Note that the .xxx registry will not take applications for reservation or registration directly; as with other domain names, interested parties will do so via ICANN Accredited Registrars. A list of current .xxx registrars is located here. Specific pricing information will be available via those registrars.
 

Trademark Owners: Consider Pre-Reserving Your .XXX Domains Now!

After a lengthy and contentious approval process, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) recently entered into an agreement with ICM Registry to delegate the new .xxx top-level domain (TLD). The .xxx domain, intended to serve as an Internet "red light district" (despite being strongly opposed by many in the adult entertainment community itself), will likely go live later this year. In the meantime, ICM Registry has opened a "pre-reservation period" for interested members of adult entertainment industry, and for trademark owners in other industries.

As with ICANN's planned introduction of numerous generic top-level domains (gTLDs) starting next year, the introduction of .xxx presents yet another opportunity for unscrupulous registrants to take advantage of known brands. Further, as registrants of .xxx domain names must provide online, sexually-oriented adult entertainment, there is a significant risk of valuable brands being associated with such "undesirable" content. The pre-reservation service, located at http://domains.icmregistry.com, allows trademark owners to "pre-reserve," free of charge, .xxx domains of interest. For instance, a provider of traditionally wholesome goods, such as Disney, could pre-reserve the domain name disney.xxx.

Looking beyond the pre-registration phase, domain names can be defensively registered as soon as the .xxx "sunrise period" begins, which is expected to launch in August 2011. A defensive registration will allow certain trademark owners to "block" a domain name indefinitely upon payment of a one-time fee, which has yet to be determined. In the meantime, trademark owners should note that the so-called "pre-reservation" is not actually a reservation at all -- it is only an "expression of interest," and as such does not confer ownership in the reserved names, or even a right of first refusal when the .xxx names open for registration. Instead, these expressions of interest "will ensure that you get notified in advance of the appropriate allocation period and about the availability of the names you have indicated." Note that it is not necessary to "pre-reserve" a domain name in order to register that domain during the sunrise period, but it certainly can't hurt and is free of charge.

While traditional rights protection mechanisms, such as the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP), will apply to .xxx domain names, and while ICM Registry has implemented a host of other protection mechanisms that will aid trademark owners seeking to combat infringing -- or simply disparaging -- use of valuable brands, trademark owners should consider "pre-reserving" and/or defensively registering key .xxx domain names containing valuable trademarks.

If you have questions about the .xxx rollout, or about domain names, cybersquatting, or Internet trademark infringement generally or their applicability to pending matters, please contact one of Foley Hoag’s trademark attorneys listed in the sidebar, or the Foley Hoag attorney with whom you usually work.