Showing posts with label Last Resort Auction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Last Resort Auction. Show all posts

2016-08-10

New gTLD WEB Loser, Ruby Glen, Files Amended Complaint vs ICANN

UPDATE: August 23, 2016, Order (pdf) that "Defendant’s [ICANN] time to answer, move to dismiss or otherwise respond to the Amended Complaint shall be extended by thirty (30) days to Monday, September 26, 2016."


UPDATE in Ruby Glen, LLC v. ICANN: On August 8, 2016, Plaintiff Ruby Glen filed
In its amended complaint, plaintiff Ruby Glen relies, in part, on Section 6.10 (see graphic above) of the Applicant Guidebook. However, plaintiff's interpretation of the last sentence in 6.10 may be misplaced. Reportedly, other new gTLD applicants have utilized arrangements similar to Nu Dot Co and Verisign (.WEB), including for new gTLDs .BLOG and .TECH, without objection from any party or ICANN. Also, reportedly, Donuts own affiliate, Covered TLD LLC (which owns Ruby Glen LLC), granted Rightside rights to acquire Covered TLD’s 100+ applied-for new gTLDs.

Chart: Relationship between Ruby Glen LLC, Covered TLD, LLC and Donuts Inc. as disclosed in the Amended Complaint
Relationship between Ruby Glen LLC, Covered TLD, LLC and Donuts Inc.
as disclosed in the Amended Complaint
Donuts, a privately-held corporation, through its affiliate(s), applied for over 300 new gTLDs and currently operates almost 200 new gTLDs, far more than any other new gTLD registry operator. How much "due diligence" ICANN has actually done regarding the ownership and control of Donuts Inc. is unknown. ICANN hides, or "buries" from public view on its website, much information about new gTLD applicants and their affiliates, subsidiaries, parent organizations, and other "minority" or "controlling" interests. In many, if not most, cases, unless a new gTLD registry operator is a publicly-traded company on a major stock exchange, domain name registrants really have no way of knowing who actually controls the registry of their new gTLD domain name. Ownership and control can easily be hidden from public view by privately-held corporations as indicated in the Panama Papers.

Some have speculated that Ruby Glen (Donuts) never intended to acquire .WEB, but intended to "share in the spoils" as a losing bidder in a "private auction"--a casino-like process sanctioned by ICANN in its new gTLDs program--in which, after paying the new gTLD application fee (or ante) of $185,000 to ICANN, "losing bidders" receive the private auction's net proceeds, as explained here: ICANN New gTLD Private Auctions, 2015 Patsy of the Year Nominees? | DomainMondo.com.

If so, it was unfortunate for Donuts affiliate Ruby Glen, and the other losing bidders, that Verisign was wise to the private auction casino scheme, and as a result, Nu Dot Co insisted on a "last resort" auction where all net auction proceeds are escrowed with ICANN pending their use for public beneficent purposes in accordance with the guidebook. If .WEB had been a private auction, Ruby Glen (Donuts) stood to receive a share of that $132 million, which could have been $22 million or more. Of the 7 bidders for .WEB, all dropped out after the bidding reached the level of $57,500,000 to $71,900,000 (pdf), except Nu Dot Co and 1 other undisclosed bidder (2nd UPDATE: now confirmed to be Afilias not Google/Alphabet's Charleston Road Registry Inc. as earlier reported here). Three of the bidders dropped out very early (by the time the bids reached the level of $15,000,000 to $18,800,000).

As the plaintiff concedes in its amended complaint, Verisign disclosed information to the public by way of its 10-Q filed with the SEC, and a press release a few days later, about its funding agreement with Nu Dot Co in connection with new gTLD .WEB. Unlike privately-held Donuts, Verisign Inc.(NASDAQ: VRSN) is a U.S. publicly-traded corporation, and must comply with all rules of the NASDAQ Stock Market as well as all U.S. laws including disclosure requirements imposed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). In addition, as operator of market-dominant  gTLD .COM, Verisign must comply with Amendment 32 of the Cooperative Agreement with the U.S. Department of Commerce, and is also subject to the jurisdiction of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice.

Plaintiff, in its amended complaint, refers to the recent Dot Registry IRP Declaration, and also raises similar claims as raised by the plaintiff in the DotConnectAfrica [DCA] Trust vs. ICANN litigation concerning the enforceability of the "Purported Release" of ICANN in the Applicant Guidebook. However, the relevance of either the Dot Registry IRP or DCA Trust litigation, to the facts in this case, is questionable.

This is the kind of case that law firms like Jones Day (domain: jonesday.com), ICANN's legal counsel, love. The U.S. District Court Judge has already denied plaintiff's motion for a temporary restraining order, so you can expect an aggressive defense on behalf of ICANN.

ICANN has two weeks to file its answer to the amended complaint in accordance with Rule 15 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (a) (3), which provides "Unless the court orders otherwise, any required response to an amended pleading must be made within the time remaining to respond to the original pleading or within 14 days after service of the amended pleading, whichever is later."

Amended Complaint (highlighting added):


See previously on Domain MondoNew gTLD WEB, Ruby Glen, LLC v. ICANN, Complaint & TRO Request

See also: Applicant Guidebook | ICANN New gTLDs


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2016-07-25

New gTLD WEB, Ruby Glen, LLC v. ICANN, Complaint & TRO Request

UPDATE: In Ruby Glen, LLC v. ICANN, U.S. District Court Denies TRO, .WEB Auction is ON! See New gTLD dot WEB 'Last Resort' ICANN Auction: and the Winner Is? | DomainMondo.com.
"Based on the strength of ICANN’s evidence submitted in opposition to the Application for TRO, and the weakness of Plaintiff’s efforts to enforce vague terms contained in the ICANN bylaws and Applicant Guidebook, the Court concludes that Plaintiff has failed to establish that it is likely to succeed on the merits, raise serious issues, or show that the balance of hardships tips sharply in its favor on its breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and negligence claims. Moreover, because the results of the auction could be unwound, Plaintiff has not met its burden to establish that it will suffer irreparable harm in the absence of the preliminary injunctive relief it seeks. The Court additionally concludes that the public interest does not favor the postponement of the auction. Finally, the Court notes that Plaintiff’s Complaint has not adequately alleged a basis for this Court’s jurisdiction." (source: U.S. District Court Order, Ruby Glen v. ICANN, infra)
See embed belowCourt Order Denying Plaintiff's Ex Parte Application for Temporary Restraining Order [PDF, 72 KB] 26 July 2016. See also:
Also on Domain Mondo: New gTLD dot WEB 'Last Resort' ICANN Auction: and the Winner Is?

Court Order Denying Plaintiff's Ex Parte Application for Temporary Restraining Order:

--Original post below--

ICANN has been sued by yet another new gTLD applicant. This time the suit involves new gTLD .WEB, currently scheduled for last resort auction on July 27. The lawsuit was filed in United States District Court for the Central District of California, on July 22, 2016, and in addition to the complaint (embedded below), also includes an ex parte application for temporary restraining order (TRO) (embedded below), together with declarations, and exhibits. ICANN has indicated it has not yet been served with the complaint or request for TRO. The complaint has drawn upon the U.S. District Court case involving new gTLD AFRICA, by requesting a declaration of rights regarding the release of ICANN required of all new gTLD applicants:
 "33. Plaintiff seeks a declaration of its rights regarding the enforceability of the Purported Release in light of California Civil Code Section 1668, which prohibits the type of broad exculpatory clauses contained in the Purported Release: “All contracts which have for their object, directly or indirectly, to exempt anyone from responsibility for his own fraud, or willful injury to the person or property or another, or violation of law, whether willful or negligent, are against the policy of the law.” 34. Plaintiff maintains that, on its face, the Release is “against the policy of the law” because it exempts ICANN from any and all claims arising out of the application process, even those arising from fraudulent or willful conduct."
Pleadings and other documents:
Complaint:


Plaintiff’s Ex Parte Application for Temporary Restraining Order; Memorandum of Points and Authorities:


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2015-03-03

ICANN New gTLD APP Auction: Did Google Pay Too Much?

Chart of Results of New gTLD ICANN Auctions Through February 28, 2015
Results of New gTLD Last Resort ICANN Auctions Through February 28, 2015 (source: icann.org)



New gTLD: .APP
Winning Applicant: Charleston Road Registry Inc. (Google)
Winning Price: $25,001,000

12 new gTLD (new generic top-level domain) Applicants participated in the .APP Auction:
  1. .APP REGISTRY INC. 
  2. Afilias Domains No. 2 Limited 
  3. Amazon EU S.à r.l. 
  4. Charleston Road Registry Inc. (Google)
  5. dot App Limited 
  6. DotApp Inc. 
  7. Lone Maple, LLC 
  8. Merchant Law Group LLP 
  9. NU DOT CO LLC 
  10. Top Level Domain Holdings Limited
  11. TRI Ventures, Inc. 
  12. Webera Inc.
Domain Mondo had been waiting months to see what happened to the premium new gTLD .APP--one of only two premium new gTLDs (the other being .WEB), different in so many ways from most of the hundreds of other new gTLD dogs.* The BIG question had been whether the mighty Google would come to the table with its hoard of cash and stay to play instead of folding.

*"What are people saying about new gTLDs? gTLDs like . sucks were designed to get money from trademark holders and people with bad reputations. That's it. Don't gTLD people see that this crap is a waste of time? The only gTLD I have ever seen that actually makes sense is gTLD_Sucks ' I would take bow.wow because most of these gTLDs are *dogs. 98% are going to be sent to the vet and be put to sleep. Facebook didn't spend $185,000 because gTLDs aren't worth the attention. Who wants to type somedomainname. facebook?" (source: Jennifer Wolfe Keynote, NamesCon 2015, emphasis added) 

Because this was an ICANN "last resort" auction (with net proceeds going to ICANN) unlike the "private and secret auctions" also allowed under ICANN rules, we know a lot more. Below is the bidding round information for .APP. Google (Charleston Road Registry) was apparently ready to go as high as $30 million ($US), but under the rules, as a second bid auction, won the the auction for $25,001,000. So did Google overpay as it may seem looking at the chart first above? No, in Domain Mondo's opinion, Google got a bargain! It all starts with "need, want, and desire" and Google had all three plus the cash to burn. Perhaps that's why Amazon and the others folded--they knew Google could outbid anyone else in the auction. And unlike private auctions, there was no incentive for low bidders to try and bid the price up so the "losers" could pocket the net proceeds. This is a real win for Google, for mobile and web app developers and startups, and for ICANN's beleaguered new gTLDs program.

Congratulations Google!

Bidding Round Information from .APP Auction Won by Google's Charlestown Road Registry
Bidding Round Information from .APP Auction Won by Google's Charleston Road Registry (source: icann.org)










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