“Cybersquatting” on the Internet is a phenomenon that has warranted an amendment to the Trademark Dilution Act of the Lanham Act. The undisputed omnipresence of the Internet, as well as the boundless possibilities of infringement activity on the Internet, has made such an amendment inevitable, as well as necessary. Congress' power to regulate trademark infringement activity, whether traditionally or on the Internet, relies on the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution. The author asserts that participation in the Internet domain name registration process itself does not constitute the “commercial activity in commerce” requirement of the Trademark Dilution Act; in turn, such an act does not constitute commercial activity for the purposes of the Commerce Clause. Such analysis also depends on a careful look at the Internet's uniquely amorphous and borderless structure, complicated by the fact that no one nation has clear control on the Internet. Ultimately, this Note concludes that under traditional Commerce Clause analysis, foreign citizens' registration of domain names with intent to sell those registered domain names does not substantially affect interstate commerce, and that applying the Lanham Act to this activity is an improper application of Congress' Commerce Clause power.
History
Publication title
William and Mary Bill of Rights Journal
Volume
461
Pagination
1-26
ISSN
1065-8254
Department/School
Faculty of Law
Publisher
College of William and Mary * William & Mary School of Law
Place of publication
United States
Rights statement
Copyright 2015 Thomson Reuters
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Other law, politics and community services not elsewhere classified