What distinguishes a cybersquatter from a domain name marketer or "domainer" is open to a wide range of interpretation based upon individual ethical principles, that are, in no small part influenced by one's position within the business infrastructure. (eg domain name investor of business owner.) What is seen as a blatant instance of cybersquatting by one, is viewed as an example of the free enterprise system at work, by another. The two camps will, likely, never see eye to eye because the issue revolves around opposing interests and individual value systems.
Although, the question of cybersquatting- who is and who isn't- is a throughline to this discussion, it seems that hypocricy and rationalization are, mainly, responsible for adding the fuel to the fire in this debate.
tmax said:
This is my philosophy.
I am doing them a favor by holding good domain names for them.
I am preventing the others from demanding $15K for their domain names.
With $1,000 price tag, I will be happy, and the buyer should be happy too.
So.. everyone is happy.
This is a total rationalization, IMHO. Call a spade a spade. You registered a name for the purpose of making a $1,000 profit. You are, more than likely, questioning yourself because, either your conscience or the fear of a law suit is bothering you. Despite today's doubts and the second-guessing, you found an available domain name, earlier, that provided you w/ an oppurtunity to capitalize on someone else's product branding. You registered the name for the same reason that every domain name investor registers a name- to make a profit. Although, you would like to make a profit and, at the same time, make everyone happy, you can't have it both ways when your dealing with names that have been branded by someone else and that may be infringing upon their trademark. My suggestion would be to pick a path that doesn't require self-justification, get out of the middle ground, (it's an illusion, anyways), and make sure that the path you've picked is right for you, your needs and your own happiness. Remember that this is a business and not a popularity contest.
donlee, I think that you're taking heat, not, so much, because of your anti-cybersquatting position- there are others, here, who are in accordance with you- but, more as a result of the the strong, somewhat, harsh tone of your criticism of others, who are, apparently, doing something similar to what you, yourself, are doing. The person who posted the following 2 comments would, hardly, be someone that I would expect owning the rights to MarvelFilms.com, a name that, no matter how you cut it, has cybersquatting written all over it:
donlee said:
another example of true cybersquatting, if this is your true philosophy you have absolutely no ethics and no respect for the law, so you are just another black mark on the industry
donlee said:
you have people condoning extortion, the deserve to be banned IMO, but i understand that people have a right to their own oppinion, what i don't understand is why the Mod's are not in this thread telling these guys why they are wrong.
but hey ill quit, just like i said though, if the older more experienced people in this industry don't stand up for whats right, moral, and ethical then we will not have an industry for long.
Regardless of whether or not you have earned, (or will earn), any money from your purchase of MarvelFilms.com, it is more than a small stretch to see the name serving any purpose that is not connected to it's namesake, Marvel Comics. Putting up a fan site or marketing the name as a potential fan site is not, technically, considered to be cybersquatting. However, it might as well be because the result is the same. That is, unless the purpose of the purchase was made by an altruistic indiviual who was a big Spiderman fan who, simply, wanted to make everyone happy. Capitalizing on another's brand name for personal profit is just that, regardless, of what label is applied to it.
If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck and quacks like a duck than you can be damn certain that it, likely, is a duck, regardless, of it's size or color.