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How Cybersquatters Make Money from Your Children's and Your Own

Getting clicks and traffic by accident appears to be big
business. And by 'big' I mean worth MILLIONS of dollars! While
typosquatting is unfortunately not a new online marketing
practice, its use and, moreover, its ABUSE has grown
significantly and exponentially since 2000. Cybersquatting means
registering, trafficking in or using a domain name with the
intent to profit in bad faith from the goodwill of a trademark
that belongs to someone else. It commonly refers to the practice
of buying up domain names that use incorporate the names of
existing businesses with the intent to sell the names for a
profit to those businesses.

The term derives from squatting, the
practice of building some kind of home or dwelling or in some
way using someone else's landed property without their
permission. Typosquatting, although very similar to
cybersquatting, has a slightly different, but much more serious
purpose: it is employed by people who want to divert traffic to
their websites. Typosquatters typically purchase a domain name
that is a variation of a popular domain name with the
expectation that some of the traffic for the original web site
will stray to theirs by capitalizing on web surfers´
misspellings of those popular domain names. How can large
companies, with all their IT experts, not foresee something like
this happening? How come they allow tons of opportunistics to
make revenue every time innocent Internet users mistype the
original brandnames or trademarks? The answer is, cybersquatting
originated at a time when most businesses were not savvy about
the commercial opportunities on the Internet.


Since
opportunities like these rarely knock on one's door more than
once, these so-called 'entrepreneurs' reserved and registered
domain names corresponding to the names of well-known businesses
with the intent of selling the names back to the companies when
they finally woke up. Commercial domain names are obtained from
companies that are authorized to ensure that a domain name you
want is unique (no one else already has it) and issue it to you
if it is. However, these registries make no attempt to determine
whether the domain name is one that rightfully ought to go to
someone else. The principle is 'First come, first served.'
Panasonic, Fry's Electronics, Hertz and Avon were among the
first targets of cybersquatters. Well-known products, sports and
political figures and other celebrities are also among the
victims.

Today,, although the practice itself is growing,
opportunities for cybersquatters are rapidly diminishing,
because most businesses now know that nailing down domain names
is a top priority. Although trademark laws may offer some
protection, it is often cheaper to buy the domain name from the
cybersquatter than it is to sue for its use: these processes
cost money, and though you may be able to recover your costs and
attorney fees if you win, there is no guarantee; it's completely
up to the judge. Among some of the most famous examples of
domains resold by cybersquatters to companies are;
WallStreet.com for over $1 million, AltaVista.com for $3.5
million and the unprecedented $7.5 million paid for
Business.com, all in 1999. Cybersquatters may also regularly
comb lists of recently expired domain names, hoping to sell back
the name to a registrant who inadvertently let their domain name
expire.

How do you know if the domain name you want is being
used by a cybersquatter? As a general rule, first check to see
if the domain name takes you to a legitimate website. If it
takes you to a website that appears to be functional and
reasonably related in its subject matter to the domain name, you
probably are not facing a case of cybersquatting. But if you own
a trademark and find that someone is holding it hostage as a
domain name until you pay a large sum for it, you may be the
victim of cybersquatting. You can sue to get your domain name --
and possibly some money damages -- under a 1999 federal law
known as the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act or you
can initiate arbitration proceedings under the authority of the
Internet Corporation of Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and
win the name back without the expense and aggravation of a
lawsuit.

The ICANN arbitration system is considered by trademark
experts to be faster and less expensive than suing under the
ACPA, and the procedure does not require an attorney.

Typosquatting, however, is a much more dangerous practice
because it is commonly used by pornographers. Typosquatting is
based on the probability that a certain number of Internet users
will mistype the name of a web site (or its URL) when browsing
the web. Typosquatters usually register several possible typos
for a brand name or web site known for its high traffic, then
monitor to see how many clicks per day each of their typo domain
names receives, and finally use the information to sell
advertising for the web sites that receive a high volume of
accidental traffic. Ironically, advertising revenue might come
from selling ads to the original site's competitors or by
providing redirect pages to related products or services. There
are multiple ways in which typosquatters may turn typos into
revenue. When surfers mistype popular URLs, squatter companies
throw up ads in hidden browser windows, making money off of ads
few people see. As a consequence, companies such as AT&T Corp.
and The New York Times are paying for ad impressions even though
the ads are buried.

Finally, when visitors try to close their
browsers or otherwise leave the web site in question, there is
one more attempt at monetizing the mistake. Another browser
window usually pops up, with a different web site's name. This
one contains more advertisements. It's a never ending story that
sure gets on the nerves of most of us! The success of companies
that practice Cybersquatter points out some serious flaws in the
Internet's domain name system and in two of the web's most
prominent revenue models: Affiliate Programs and Advertising
Reselling. Advertising resellers such as 24/7 Media Inc.,
Advertising.com Inc. and iBoost Technology Inc. contract with
large advertisers and then automatically feed ads onto thousands
of web sites. The automated method of placing ads on sites can
make tracking where those ads end up a very difficult task.
Needless to say, typosquatters do not think there is anything
wrong with using people's errors to grow traffic.

However, it is
a whole different story when typosquatting is employed by
pornographers to attract children to their websites. Until now,
there have been few methods of stopping pornographers and others
abusing the domain name system from misleading children and
adults into accessing sites masquerading as popular legitimate
sites. Many adult web sites misrepresent their content or the
nature of their sites by registering domain names that are
intentionally confusing, using page coding designed to mislead
search engines, distributing false advertising to promote site
traffic, or hijacking visitors of another site. The problem is
particularly serious when children are involved. Just as adults
do, children get spam and unsolicited instant messages with
graphic sexual images, content, or links to pornographic sites.
Statistics show that 20% to 30% of traffic to adult sites is
comprised of children. Many masquerade as messages from trusted
friends or web sites. Children also may be tricked into visiting
a pornographic site when they search for age-appropriate words
or phrases on a search engine.


Even if you find it hard to
believe, depending on the type of marketing or advertising model
used by a particular web site, there may be no incentive to
filter children. In fact, targeting children may be an effective
way of increasing ad revenue. The name of the game is web site
traffic where adult sites are concerned. So they cannot rely
just on keywords to increase traffic. As part of the Amber Alert
legislation, typosquatting is now a crime in the United States.
Porn network czar John Zuccarini was the first person charged
under the new typosquatting law by the U.S. Attorney's office in
the Southern District of New York and pleaded guilty in 2004. He
was sentenced to two and a half years in prison. Until the
enactment of the Protect Act (most commonly known as the 'Amber
Alert' legislation), stopping typosquatters was a civil matter,
or perhaps (under extraordinary circumstances) a consumer fraud
matter. The sites Zuccarini has been found to have cybersquatted
include those referring to Nicole Kidman, Backstreet Boys,
Encarta and others. His manipulation of Aaron Carter's and
Britney Spears' names is among his more recent abuses. Courts
have already held that there is no legitimate purpose for
Zuccarinin registering and using the typo-domains other than to
trade on the popularity of the underlying domain names,
celebrities and products involved.

In summary, cybersquatters and typosquatters are unethical
companies and individuals that want to profit from your family's
and your own confusion and spelling mistakes. If you want to
help protect your children and others online, drop by
www.Anti-Spam-League.org and report those who are engaged in
these and other unscrupulous online marketing practices. Become
a member for free and sign up to receive our Newsletters with
useful and valuable information on how to handle abuses on the
Internet. Also, look for more articles on related topics on our
web site. You will learn how we can really make a difference by
working together with consumers and companies to preserve
Internet users' freedom and privacy while promoting loyal
advertising and good art on marketing practices.


Autoresponders Build Relationships In Your Affiliate Marketing


It's true that "content is king", but equally important to success in online marketing of any kind is contact. Not just the one time "flash in the pan" type either. You need to form relationships with your potential customers, and maintain it on a day to day basis. Remember, just as with content,. . .


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