Categories: Business

Apple calls in the United Nations to get ownership of ‘iPods.com’

Let us take you back to 2001, back in the day when a tablet was something that you could swallow and social networking actually involved leaving the house.  Back then Apple had just launched the iPod, and sales were going well for them.

Credit: Apple

Anyway, six months after its October launch someone enterprising fellow registered ipods.com and redirected the domain to a dodgy mp3 download site.  Fast forward nine years and Apple decided that it really should be the company that controls the ipods.com domain.

So, in May 2010 Apple filed an intellectual property complaint with the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), an arm of the United Nations that is “dedicated to developing a balanced and accessible international intellectual property (IP) system, which rewards creativity, stimulates innovation and contributes to economic development while safeguarding the public interest.”

On Friday the UN body decided in Apple’s favour and ordered that the domain be transferred to the iPod maker (although that has not happened just yet).  There is no official word as to why the decision to transfer the domain has been made, although Apple’s ownership of the iPod trademark and the fact that the domain resolved to an MP3 website which Comodo Security lists as unsafe might have something to do with it.

This is good news for Apple, but according to Fusible, who broke the story, the company has a sloppy history with registering domains for its products.  To date the company doesn’t own some of the most obvious domains associated with its brands; for example ipad.com.  Although, even with that, it is a bit odd that Apple would go after ipods.com rather than ipad.com; according to Compete ipods.com has averaged about 80 unique visitors per month over the past year.  By contrast ipad.com has averaged 38,000 monthly impressions over the past year.

Credit:Compete

The UN’s World Intellectual Property Organization Domain Name Dispute Resolution services have frequently been called upon by large organisations attempting to protect their intellectual property.  In November 2010 Groupon filed a case with the organization to get groupon.ie transferred into its ownership while the WordPress.org, in July, won the transfer of several domains which mimicked its own.

For more about this read Fusible (@fusible  | Fusible on Facebook).

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

View Comments

Recent Posts

AI scams targeting businesses are surging: Here are the top 3 threats your team is likely to face in 2026 (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

Imagine a company interviewing a candidate for a senior IT role. The résumé checks out,…

2 hours ago

AI Won’t Scale in Advertising Until Trust Does: How to Identify AI Tools That Deliver Quality Security and Expertise

At the start of the year, data suggested that only about a third of agencies,…

4 hours ago

What It Means When Algorithms Say “I”: Toward a Theory of Digital Subjectivity

Picture an AI assistant you have worked with for the past five years. It knows…

17 hours ago

Why One of the Oldest Coding Languages Still Outsmarts Modern AI

They tried to kill it. To bury it for good. But every time, it clawed back — stronger,…

17 hours ago

One of Europe’s most promising healthtech startups, Deep Care, arrives in the U.S. for the first time

We often hear that a sedentary lifestyle is the new smoking. As an increasing percentage…

3 days ago

UN launches ‘Digital Cooperation Portal’ to track, facilitate Global Digital Compact compliance

The UN compliance portal is about making sure govts work with the private sector to…

3 days ago