Tiffany Sues
36 Websites for Selling CounterfeitsOn
Jan. 7, Tiffany & Co. filed suit in Florida federal court against
36 websites it claims are selling counterfeit versions of its
products�the latest in a series of suits whose costs the jeweler calls
�staggering.�The websites, with URLs which illegally incorporate the Tiffany name in the dotcom titles,
are �promoting, selling, offering for sale, and distributing goods
bearing counterfeits and confusingly similar imitations of Tiffany�s
trademarks,� says the suit.
It alleges federal trademark infringement
and counterfeiting, false designation of origin, cyber-squatting, and
common law unfair competition. Tiffany & Co. believes that
people behind the sites mostly reside in the People�s Republic of China,
and it believes they provide �false and misleading information� when
applying for domains. The legal papers take note of the difficulty of
policing trademarks in the online era. �The recent explosion of
counterfeiting over the Internet has created an environment which
requires Tiffany to file a large number of lawsuits, often it later
turns out, against the same individuals and groups,� the papers say.
�The financial burden on Tiffany and companies similarly situated is
staggering, as is the resulting burden on the Federal court system.�
The suit seeks to permanently enjoin the people behind the
websites, who are listed as �John Does,� from establishing future sites
with the Tiffany mark. It also asks that the sites be disabled, their
domains be removed from search engines, and that the contents of their
PayPal accounts be emptied and turned over to Tiffany. Earlier
this month, a group of brands under the Richemont umbrella won a $100 million default judgment against a series of sites it
claimed were selling counterfeit versions of its watches.
------------- That which doesn't kill you makes you stronger or drives you totally insane. :-)
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