Pinterest Gets Control Of 100 Domains, Wins $7.2 Million In Cybersquatting Case

A federal judge ruled in Pinterest’s favor this week, granting the company $7.2 million in damages and the control of 100 domains that were registered by a Chinese cybersquatter. Qian Jin, described in the judgment as a “serial cybersquatter” that owns hundreds of domains similar to the names of large companies, registered domains such as […]

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A federal judge ruled in Pinterest’s favor this week, granting the company $7.2 million in damages and the control of 100 domains that were registered by a Chinese cybersquatter.

Qian Jin, described in the judgment as a “serial cybersquatter” that owns hundreds of domains similar to the names of large companies, registered domains such as pinterests.com, pimterest.com and pinterost.com “after Pinterest.com and the PIN mark gained fame and began attracting visitors,” the judgment says.

The judge determined that this constituted “willful” infringement and said that “the association of defendant’s mark with Pinterest’s is likely to harm the reputation of Pinterest and create a likelihood of dilution by tarnishment.”

Pinterest had asked for $12 million in damages, but the judge granted the company $7.2 million based on previous case history.

As reported by AllThingsD, a Pinterest spokesperson called the decision “a good outcome for the people who use Pinterest.”


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About the author

Matt McGee
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Matt McGee joined Third Door Media as a writer/reporter/editor in September 2008. He served as Editor-In-Chief from January 2013 until his departure in July 2017. He can be found on Twitter at @MattMcGee.

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