Harvard University announced it is suing a Boston man for violating the new federal "cyber-piracy" law, which was enacted just last week.
Michael Rhys and Michael Douglas, both of Jamaica Plain are named as the co-defendants in the suit, which was filed Monday in the U.S. District Court in Boston.
The University suspects the two men are actually the same person.
Harvard alleges that "Rhys and Douglas" registered 65 Internet names using the words "Harvard" and "Radcliffe," with the intention of later selling them to Harvard for a profit.
"We're not seeking monetary damages. We simply want an injunction to get them to stop," said Robert B. Donin, Harvard's Deputy General Counsel.
The suit was filed just days after a new law, The Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, made it illegal for Internet users to buy Web addresses with the intent of selling them for profit.
If trademark owners can prove an act of "cybersquatting," they can recover statutory damages of up to $100,000.
Rhys "registered a number of domain names that include the names 'Harvard' and 'Radcliffe' even though they have no connection with the University and did this simply for the purpose of selling the registrations to others and making a profit," Donin said.
A web domain called "Virtualharvard.com" is just one of the dozens of University-related names "Rhys and Douglas" own, and is for sale from a company called Web-Pro.com., according to a report in the Boston Globe.
Harvard claims that Web Pro is a company which Rhys alone controls.
Other Web site names include harvarddivinity.com, HarvardYardSale.com, harvard-lawschool.com, and harvardgraduateschool.com.
Donin said that the legal definitions of blackmail and extortion are not correct characterizations of what "Rhys and Douglas" did, though the lawyer confirmed that the University had been solicited about buying the web site names.
"They contacted us and asked us if we wanted to buy these names," Donin said. "We filed the lawsuit shortly after we sent them a letter demanding that they cease and desist using the names and offering them for sale and they didn't respond," he said.
According to the Globe, had "Rhys and Douglas" succeeded in selling the names to Harvard at their desired price, they would have raked in nearly $325,000 in profit.
Contacted yesterday at his Boston office, a man who identified himself as Michael Rhys said he did not have anything to say about the University's suit.
Recommended Articles
-
University Begins Search for General CounselThe University has begun advertising the position of vice president and general counsel which was vacated by Margaret H. Marshal
-
Magazine Tests Harvard's New Copyright Policy"What's in a name?" The age-old question has fresh significance for a journal of gay and lesbian ideas called The
-
Court Decision Allows Union RenovationsIn a stinging setback for local preservationists, a Cambridge judge ruled yesterday that the University may move forward with plans
-
Work On Fogg Claimed FaultySince September 1996, the Harvard University Art Museums have become involved in two separate lawsuits relating to work done by
-
Abroad ViewHarvard students, founders of Let’s Go and volunteers for a plethora of global aid organizations, are not known for being
-
Harvard Researcher: Google-Generated Ads Show Racial BiasA Harvard researcher has found that typically African-American names are more likely to be linked to a criminal record in Google-generated advertisements on the online search engine and on the news site Reuters.com, a website to which Google supplies advertisements.