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Friday, Jan. 7, 2000 6:01 pm PT |
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Net Prophet |Sean
M. Dugan
The war over a single letter -- eToys vs. etoy
and civil disobedience protests via the Web
DOES CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE have a place in cyberspace?
I've been wondering about this question in light of the dispute between
eToys and etoy.
Like the locals from an old neighborhood who are irritated
by the arrival of the nouveau riche, many veteran Net heads deplore the
commercialization of the Internet. The eToys vs. etoy battle is indicative
of the clash between new-money commerce companies and old-time Internet
culture.
In case you missed it, etoy -- singular, not plural
-- is a group of Swiss artists and pranksters of some fame within certain
circles. On the other hand, eToys is one of the top commerce sites on the
Internet and valued at slightly less than $4 billion as of this writing.
Now, you've probably noticed the similarity in their
names. And that's at the heart of a bitter legal dispute between the two;
eToys filed suit against etoy, alleging a trademark infringement. Etoys
finally backed down and dropped its lawsuit after generating a small firestorm
of a controversy. Network Solutions managed to toss a little more gasoline
on the fire by unplugging etoy's e-mail, something that arguably went beyond
the scope of the original restraining order.
In the real world, different companies with similar
names can distinguish themselves by location, physical structures, and
the like. On the Internet, a single letter can be all that separates two
wildly different organizations.
But let's be crystal clear about one thing: Despite
some press accounts of this story, etoy vs. eToys was not an example of
someone cybersquatting on a valuable domain, looking for a cash windfall.
According to the Whois database of who owns which domain names, etoy.com
and its record were first created on Oct. 13, 1995; eToys.com's record
was created on Nov. 3, 1997.
It's really rather simple: The etoy artists and their
Web site predate eToys by two years. But eToys has a trademark and millions
of dollars invested in its brand.
Regardless of your position on the issue, the eToys
lawsuit was quite a blunder. The move to block the etoy Web site smacks
of a big-money corporation using its muscle to push around the little guy,
something that always gets you a lot of popular support. You have to wonder:
After all the money eToys spent to promote its brand, couldn't the company
have come up with a better solution? It makes you wonder how eBay has restrained
itself from suing eBoy.com and whether Buy.com should sic its lawyers on
Buys.com. And let's not bring up Whitehouse.com and the subtle distinction
between it and Whitehouse.gov.
Several groups and individuals started Denial of Service
(DoS) attacks on eToys and its Web site. Having customers locked out of
the site during the all-important holiday retail season potentially could
have had devastating economic consequences for the e-tailer. According
to eToys officials, site availability only dropped 2 percent; others say
eToys and its availability was seriously affected.
DoS attacks aren't legal; they deny owners and legitimate
users access to property. It's clearly an infringement on a company's Web
site. At the same time, launching a DoS attack is not the same as cracking
a site and defacing it or destroying data.
Consider this: How is the little guy is supposed to
fight an injustice against Goliath? A few artists taking on a multibillion
dollar dot-com giant doesn't seem like much of a fight. As an example,
in order to protect its name, etoy has had to fight eToys in a Los Angeles
court.
So how do you conduct civil disobedience on the Internet?
The classic form of nonviolent civil disobedience is a sit-in, often blocking
access to businesses or government facilities. Martin Luther King Jr. changed
the fate of this country and millions of people with it. Mahatma Gandhi
freed a nation.
I'm not going to be facile enough to say that the
etoy struggle is comparable to the struggle for human freedom. But the
Internet is changing everything in our society. And the techniques of real-world
social change will find an analogy online.
And yes, protesters are often going to annoy and irritate.
But they draw your attention to a cause. And that's really the point of
social protest.
Forum
etoy
vs. eToys: When a dot-com plays dirty over a name, where does the problem
lie?
Missed a column? Click here
for more
Sean M. Dugan hopes eToys learned its lesson in all this. Write to him at sean_dugan@infoworld.com
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