You are in: Entertainment | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Tuesday, 17 October, 2000, 13:55 GMT 14:55 UK
Madonna wins cyber fight
Madonna has won her fight to use the website address madonna.com which was being used as a pornography site by a so-called "cybersquatter".
The UN World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) ruled that Dan Parisi, an American entrepreneur, had not registered the name in good faith.
Parisi bought the domain name in 1998 for $20,000 and used the site to feature sexually explicit photographs and text. Meanwhile, Madonna has confirmed she will meet Michael Parkinson for an interview to be screened on his BBC programme later in the year. Parkinson said: "Madonna is one of the great stars of the modern era. "She can hold her own against any star in the 20th century." Celebrities such as Julia Roberts and Isabelle Adjani have also won cases against cybersquatters in recent months. The WIPO panel found that Parisi "lacks rights or legitimate interests in the domain name". But the 40-year-old claimed that Madonna had no greater right to the website than any other individual or organisation with the Madonna name. The WIPO system allows those who believe they have the real right to a domain to get it back without having to take legal action. Since the site was shut down last year Parisi has been posting information about the case, turning it into a forum campaigning for the rights of individual web users. Sting in the tale The website says: "We lost the WIPO case today. Our attorneys have asked us to keep quiet in regards to the decision until we figure what if anything we are going to do." It adds: "She was named after the Virgin Mary as was her mother and hundreds of thousands of other people throughout the world over the past 2000 years.
Madonna has been enjoying a successful few months, with her album Music going to number one in more than 23 countries, including the UK and the US. She has been confirmed as one of the performers at next month's MTV Europe awards in Stockholm, in which she has been nominated for three awards. Dan Parisi claims that he was in the process of handing over the rights to the domain name to a US hospital, Madonna Rehabilitation, which has the domain name madonna.org, when the case started. WIPO has adjudicated on more than 500 cases, with the plaintiff winning 84% of the cases, since it started last year. British pop star Sting lost his case over the website sting.com because WIPO argued that his name was also a common English word and Sting was not his real name. Earlier this month the BBC won its case to evict a cybersquatter using the domain name bbcnews.com.
|
See also:
Internet links:
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Entertainment stories now:
Links to more Entertainment stories are at the foot of the page.
|
Links to more Entertainment stories
|
^^ Back to top News Front Page | World | UK | UK Politics | Business | Sci/Tech | Health | Education | Entertainment | Talking Point | In Depth | AudioVideo ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- To BBC Sport>> | To BBC Weather>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- © MMIII | News Sources | Privacy |