On BNET: Turn your iPhone into an air mouse
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

Category: Right of publicity

June 13th, 2009

Six things to know if your Facebook username has been squatted

Posted by Denise Howell @ 8:34 am

Categories: Defamation, Identity, Live Web, Right of publicity, Social networking, Trademark

Tags: Facebook, Facebook Usernames, Squatting, Denise Howell

In Focus » See more posts on: Intellectual Property

Six things to know if your Facebook Username has been squattedHere are some things to bear in mind about username squatting on Facebook.

  1. I’m guessing Mike Arrington can get this fixed with a phone call or two. (via Dave Winer) If you’re not him…
  2. You may have missed the fact there was, before username registration opened up, a form to complete for “preventing [your] trademarks from being registered as usernames.” That form is now closed, and links off instead to Facebook’s non-copyright IP Infringement Form. (Given its wording and stated purpose, I doubt it would have helped with non-trademark-registered individual names anyway.)
  3. Facebook (like Twitter, etc.) is not ICANN, and the UDRP has no application to its vanity URLs. Facebook’s terms of service, however, mandate that users not “take any action on Facebook that infringes someone else’s rights or otherwise violates the law.”
  4. Many jurisdictions, (including California where Facebook is headquartered), restrict or prohibit unauthorized use of a person’s “name, image, likeness or other unequivocal aspects of one’s identity.”
  5. It’s not “squatting” if someone else happens to share an individual’s name and was able to register it or a variation.
  6. All that said, it seems one’s first recourse as the victim of a username squatter is the aforementioned non-copyright IP Infringement Form.

I’d be interested in hearing about people’s experiences with this — whether it turns out to be streamlined and effective or frustrating and a pain. Let me know and I’ll update.

Previously: Chris Pirillo is socialsquatted; does the law care?

Denise HowellDenise Howell is an appellate, intellectual property and technology lawyer who enjoys broad industry recognition for her expertise on the intersection of emerging technologies and law. See her full profile and disclosure of her industry affiliations.

Email Denise Howell

Subscribe to Lawgarithms via Email alerts or RSS.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement

Recent Entries

Top Rated

    advertisement

    Archives

    ZDNet Blogs

    White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

    SmartPlanet

    • Thought-provoking progressive ideas on diverse topics that intersect with technology, business, and life, and matter to the world at large. Visit SmartPlanet
    • More from IBM
    • Innovate your business' process model, play against the market, compete against others on our scoreboards and WIN! Try INNOV8 2.0: A BPM Simulator
    • Enabling Real-World Business Transformation through IBM Service Management Read the EMA Analyst Report
    Click Here