Google Hit With Typosquatting Class Action
By Jason Lee Miller - Thu, 10/23/2008 - 3:40pm.
Asked to stop funding with AdSense
Harvard Business School professor Benjamin Edelman believes Google is profiting from and encouraging typosquatting by placing ads on trademark infringing made-for-AdSense websites. As co-counsel in a class action suit, Edelman suggests Google could be making money from a million domains or more.
Typosquatting is the practice of registering a domain that is an errant version of a popular website in order to gain traffic and ad clicks from people who misspell or mistype their intended domain. For example, one might type bankofamrica.com instead of bankofamerica.com. Typosquatting has been illegal in the States since 1999, and is considered trademark infringement in most countries.
In a recent report for McAfee, Edelman said more than 80,000 typosquatting domains for the top 2,000 websites, and singled out Google as the largest ad network contributing to the viability of these sites.
“The largest network in this space is Google, whose AdSense for Domains product and other domain-syndication products serve ads on more than 80 percent of the typosquatting sites recently uncovered by
SiteAdvisor technology,” Edelman wrote.
In that same report, freecreditreport.com was the most targeted, with 742 typosquatting domains registered, followed by cartoonnetwork.com (kids’ sites are often targeted) with 327, youtube.com with 320, craigslist.org with 318, and Google’s own blogspot.com with 276.
In an article for The Harvard Crimson, Edelman low-ball estimated a million sites earning $25 per year for the owners, meaning Google was likely charging between $32-$50, equaling at least $32 million annual gross for Google. Edelman believes it could be more (it could also be less, though).
Because of the range of companies indicated with possible trademark infringement cases, the suit has been filed as a class action. “We believe class action adjudication is the most efficient way to resolve these companies’ complaints,” Edelman said in The Crimson. “It would be unreasonably complicated, costly, and time-consuming for all trademark holders to sue separately.”
If Google were to abandon the typosquatting industry, he argues, it could be far less of a problem. In a standard statement to the press, Google has said the lawsuit’s claims are “baseless” and that the company would fight the suit vigorously.
If all true, it’s interesting Google would be so lax in dealing with typosquatting domainers. For all the company’s noble efforts to fight other shady practices like malware—most definitely a concern with squatters—various link spam techniques (and paid links certainly), and deceptive marketing tactics, aiding and profiting from typosquatting would be a definite stain on the company’s overall reputation.
The source of this information is from here.
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Typosquatting Class Action Lawsuit Filed Against Google
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harvard business school,
typosquatting
Thursday, October 9, 2008
Trademark infringement in PPC is a growing problem on content networks and major search engines
Click Forensics Launches Trademark Abuse Reporting
Click Forensics has introduced a new feature for its advertisers, which allows them to identify, and track organizations that unlawfully use trademarked names for search marketing campaigns.
The new feature produces updated reports on possible trademark abusers who use well-know brand names to generate Pay Per Click (PPC) traffic. Companies can use the new feature to take action to protect intellectual property and their own search marketing investments.
Trademark infringement in PPC is a growing problem on content networks and major search engines such as Google, Yahoo! And MSN. Perpetrators regularly register domains containing well-known brand names and then display ads on them to generate traffic and PPC ad revenue. Internet users often see the results when mistyping a Web site URL and then find themselves on a different Web site with lots of ads and pop-ups.
The Trademark Use report works by flagging registered domains using trademarked names. Similar to a spam filter, Click Forensics for Advertisers generates regular updates on new sites committing click fraud, trademark infringement or those sending bad traffic to clients and members.
"The impact of trademark infringement in search advertising goes beyond consumer annoyance," said Paul Pellman, CEO of Click Forensics.
"It's affecting the advertising budgets of major brands as they're forced to spend more money to get the high-quality search traffic that is rightly theirs. We're helping to change that by giving brands a tool they can use to fight back."
The original source for this post came from an article Mike Sachoff of Web Pro News wrote on 10/9/2008.
Click Forensics has introduced a new feature for its advertisers, which allows them to identify, and track organizations that unlawfully use trademarked names for search marketing campaigns.
The new feature produces updated reports on possible trademark abusers who use well-know brand names to generate Pay Per Click (PPC) traffic. Companies can use the new feature to take action to protect intellectual property and their own search marketing investments.
Trademark infringement in PPC is a growing problem on content networks and major search engines such as Google, Yahoo! And MSN. Perpetrators regularly register domains containing well-known brand names and then display ads on them to generate traffic and PPC ad revenue. Internet users often see the results when mistyping a Web site URL and then find themselves on a different Web site with lots of ads and pop-ups.
The Trademark Use report works by flagging registered domains using trademarked names. Similar to a spam filter, Click Forensics for Advertisers generates regular updates on new sites committing click fraud, trademark infringement or those sending bad traffic to clients and members.
"The impact of trademark infringement in search advertising goes beyond consumer annoyance," said Paul Pellman, CEO of Click Forensics.
"It's affecting the advertising budgets of major brands as they're forced to spend more money to get the high-quality search traffic that is rightly theirs. We're helping to change that by giving brands a tool they can use to fight back."
The original source for this post came from an article Mike Sachoff of Web Pro News wrote on 10/9/2008.
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