On October 10, the major investment firm BlackRock filed a lawsuit in a U.S. court against the owners of 44 internet domain names. These domain names include terms such as “Blackrock,” “Aladdin,” “capital,” “crypto,” and “investments.”
BlackRock alleges that these domain names were registered in bad faith to trick people and profit from their confusion. The alleged tactics used by the domain owners include displaying pay-per-click ads, spreading malware, and conducting email phishing attacks to redirect web traffic for their financial gain.
BlackRock’s legal team, represented by Wiley Rein LLP, referred to studies showing that more than 95% of the 500 most popular websites on the Internet are victims of a practice called “typosquatting.” This means that domains are registered with names similar to legitimate websites but with typographical errors.
BlackRock is accusing these domain owners of violating the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act by registering domain names that are intentionally similar to BlackRock’s own, which can mislead consumers.
BlackRock encountered issues with certain cryptocurrency-related domain names. For example, “blackrock-crypto.net” did not open, and “crypto-blackrock.com” was a website offering web design services.
However, many other domains tested by The CryptoTimes, either did not open or appeared to be cases of cybersquatting, where individuals or entities register domain names in bad faith.
To address this, BlackRock used publicly available domain registration data from the Whois database to identify the domain owners.
The company is now taking legal action to gain control of these problematic domains, seeking damages and requesting court orders to prevent further cybersquatting and trademark infringement related to its brands, including BLACKROCK, ALADDIN, and BLK, by the defendants.
Also Read: SEC Delays Bitcoin ETF Decision For BlackRock & Others