Apple iPhone
Cyber-squatters have secured as many iPhone and operator domain name combinations as possible
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Cyber-squatters exploit UK iPhone launch

Key domain names already snapped up

Ian Williams, vnunet.com 27 Sep 2007
ADVERTISEMENT

Cyber-squatters have been quick to pounce on the much-anticipated announcement of the UK launch date and chosen operator for Apple's iPhone.

Several key domain names were snapped up ahead of the UK launch on 9 November as cyber-squatters sought to exploit the expected frenzy.

Valuable domains relating to the iPhone and the major UK mobile operators have been linked to lucrative Google-style pay-per-click advertising.

"The iPhone launch is one of the biggest product launches of 2007 and has been just as eagerly anticipated by cyber-squatters as it has by consumers," said Jonathan Robinson, chief operating officer at domain name provider NetNames.

"Cyber-squatters have spent a great deal of time over the past few months securing as many iPhone and operator domain name combinations as possible based on speculation about the launch."

One cyber-squatter in particular has already registered 'www.o2iphone.co.uk', 'www.o2iphone.net' and 'www.orangeiphone.co.uk'.

All the domain names point to websites that feature pay-per-click advertising to make money from misdirected consumers, and some sites are even claiming to offer international unlocked iPhones.

Numerous other domain names have been snapped up by cyber-squatters in anticipation of the launch, including 'www.ukiphone.co.uk', 'www.02iphone.co.uk', 'www.tmobileiphone.com' and 'www.iphonevodafone.co.uk'.

NetNames stressed that it is paramount for organisations and brands to look at as many variables as possible when it comes to protecting their domain name portfolios.

"Online reputation is of the utmost importance to major international technology brands, yet many still overlook the threat from cyber-squatters, leaving their online reputations open to an untold amount of damage," said Robinson.

Charlie Abrahams, vice president of online brand protection company MarkMonitor, told vnunet.com that the cyber-squatters are infringing on Apple's and the operators' trademarks and that the companies could send cease-and-desist letters to the site owners to shut them down.

MarkMonitor said that it had seen an increase in trademark-infringing cyber-squatting from 286,000 cases in the second quarter of 2007 to 311,000 in the third quarter.

See also:

Starbucks50 million free tracks to push iTunes Wi-Fi Music Store  25 Sep 2007
Apple iPhoneNew update could render unlocked phones useless  25 Sep 2007
iPod TouchUsers complain about poor video quality  24 Sep 2007
Apple iPhoneT-Mobile snaps up four more territories, according to report  18 Sep 2007
Apple iPhoneApple smartphone passes milestone in just 74 days  11 Sep 2007
Apple iPod TouchMedia player gains Wi-Fi and touch screen  06 Sep 2007

All Mobile Communications

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
Sutton, Surrey, United Kingdom | Royal Marsden Hospital NHS Trust
  The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust is a centre of excellence for research, development, education and care in the treatment of cancer. Analyst Programmers, Band 6, £23,458-£31,779 plus 15% HCAS, Sutton, Surrey We are ... more >
Chichester, United Kingdom | West Sussex County Council
  Principal Application Specialist - Application Developer, Chichester, £42,100 - £44,700 (includes Market Rate Supplement) IT Services at WSCC supports and manages a variety of systems based on Oracle databases that include third party and ... more >
Maidstone, United Kingdom | Kent Police
  Forensic Computer Analyst - Police Headquarters, Maidstone, £27,891 - £38,476 Permanent Contract Digital devices and information communication technology are present in almost every investigation the police service undertakes. Kent Police Digital Forensics Unit is ... more >
United Kingdom | Data Transparency
.NET Software Developer,  £20,000 - £35,000 depending on experience About us Data Transparency is a small, rapidly growing company established in 2006 by an Oxford graduate. We create bespoke web-based data systems that are used in ... more >
More job opportunities