Hey Aaron,
My questions are,
1. What do you do when they subpeona your private domain registration?
2. If they do get your information what do you do next.
3. If you default, can they make you pay?
4. What do they really want? Do they want to scare people into not using there name? They want a cease and exist? or they want money?
5. is registering a name like fqxnews even playing "gray" or is this just a bad idea?
Look forward to your response.
V3NE
Aaron is busy watching Real Housewives of New Jersey or shaving his back,, so here goes:
1: DomainsByProxy and similar private reg services will roll over on you faster than you can say "private", I've been able to get them to just give me the underlying register's details with just a phone call in a lot of cases, but all will give it up at some point. Private Registration can ALWAYS be broken by an experienced attorney. Typically, these services will notify you when they've given out that info, or contact you telling you that you have X# of days to contact them directly or they will give it out. The person who served the subpoena is under no obligation to notify you directly.
2. Depending on their goal, most will arrange for legal service of process on you if they have filed a legal complaint in their home jurisdiction
3. In a lot of cases, yes. See Aaron's above discussion of FF&C clause, but states are required to recognize judgments from another state. They still have to find your assets though, liening real property is rare in cases like this. a judgment by itself, with no info about where assets like real property are, is fairly useless.
4. Varies by company, most just want to protect their brand name and possibly send a message to people that are a headache. Rarely is their goal to "make money" off the deal, mostly they want the Offender to go away and quit what they are doing. Most ask for the domain to be transferred to them (Amazon.com always asks for this, then gives you an Amazon gift certificate as "payment" for the domain they got from you by legal action, lulz)
5. That domain wouldn't be as bad as something that directly used part a real name (e.g. Fox5News.com would be worse), but its still gray. Safer to use something completely made-up (SunshineNews7.net or such) that, even though might be mistaken for a news station, won't be mistaken for being the same as an existing, known, brand-name news station.
Good Q's.