Haven't seen the etoy vs. eToys controversy mentioned on the list so I
pass this on. Even MoMA has gotten involved.
Robbin Murphy
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http://artnetweb.com/iola/
---------- Forwarded message ----------
The following are statements by Suzanne Meszoly
and Douglas Rushkoff, etoy.ADVISORY-BOARD members,
read at today's press conference.
SUZANNE MESZOLY AT ETOY PRESS CONFERENCE
NYC, Museum of Modern Art, December 20, 1999
FREEDOM ON THE INTERNET
AN AMERICAN HORROR STORY
THE FACTS:
etoy an international art group has been sued by EToys,
an American multi billion dollar internet toy company for
trademark infringement claiming that the art group?s name
is too close to its own. Etoys the toy company has defamed
the international art group etoy by calling them
criminal, hackers, pornographers and terrorists.
On November 29, 1999 a Los Angeles Superior Court judge
responded to eToys' lawsuit by issuing a preliminary
injunction, preventing the award-winning Internet artists,
etoy, from using their www.etoy.com Web site. and preventing
them from offering and selling etoy.SHARES in the United
States of America. Both etoys and etoy do business on line.
As far as I understand and as mentioned in the Morning
Edition on National Public Radio on December 13 by Megan
Gray an expert in internet and intellectual property law,
trademark infringement requires companies to have
substantially similar names and for those companies to
have substantially similar goods and services. I fail to
see that etoy sells toys online. Regarding the question
of first come first served and domain names, etoy.com have
been on the net since 1995 and were founded in 1994. Etoys,
the world's leading online toy retailer, was founded in
1996 and registered the name etoys.com in 1997 and
owns the trademark.
Etoys the toy company decided that the similar web
address of the international art group was confusing
their customers and took legal action leading to the
preliminary decision made in the California court,
which in turn has lead to the loss of the artists
domain name, restrictions placed on their etoy.share
art project and subsequently the loss of their email
addresses as well. (Network Solutions, the company that
maintains the master list of internet addresses (domains)
has blocked email service to etoy.com, though this was
not mandated by the injunction.) Apparently Network
Solutions does this when domain names are under investigation.
Etoy has been isolated by this action from the supportive
internet community: restricting the etoy.email addreses
was not a part of the official court decision and
compromises the fundamental rights of speech, expression,
organization and self defense. We fail to see the legality
of this Network Solutions action. Network Solutions has said
they are "unable" to reach etoy in Zurich.
The preliminary injunction of the California court represents
a legal precedence: an ebusinesss giant is restricting
the very existence of an art company. There is no business
overlap here as I have already stated.
This case merely demonstrates who has the right to conduct
business, operate, express themselves and exist in cyberspace.
The legalities of this court case are obviously under
discussion as well, not only because it is yet another
case of "cash driven justice".
The artists currently run operations from Europe and
remain there today.
The next decision will be made December 27, 1999, again
in the California court, where the etoy art group has been
requested to provide an exhaustive amount of documentation,
as well as appearing in person.
This court case has obviously received a great deal of
attention both in America and around the world for it deals
with freedom on the internet and through this case we can
see an American State court regulating the wide-open
international landscape of the internet, of art.
Etoy has created a crisis advisory board of international
experts, of which I am the director, to assist with the
development of this court case and to help etoy retain its
intellectual and internet property. Etoy does not and will
not be involved in any action which is illegal or
harmful to any person or institution. Etoy simply wants
to exist as before as a meaningful and creative art project.
Etoy has never intended to interfere with the business
of internet toy retailers.
Etoy will not engage with traditional means, etoy will not
hack or aggress the etoys or other opponents that attempt
to destroy our territory and intellectual and cultural
property, however through this current process etoy has
continued to infect the world with the etoy message: the
message has broken through the glass doors of the museum,
through the computer monitors and hit the streets, the
newspapers, CNN, the business news, the television. The
stocks, the court judges, the activitists, the riots, the
MOMA, the advisors, the netizens, the world has transformed
the etoy idealogy into a reality. The surreal has become
real.
Hacking reality????
This is the etoy value
DOUGLAS RUSHKOFF AT ETOY PRESS CONFERENCE
NYC, Museum of Modern Art, December 20, 1999
Back in 1994, the Internet was limited to
non-commercial purposes. Users had to agree not to
conduct commerce online in order to get an account.
When a pair of immigration lawyers sent out the first
"spam" email offering their services, they were booted
off the Internet, altogether.
How times have changed. When commercial interests
moved online, many of us were concerned they would
change the essential character of this space -- that a
communications infrastructure would be turned into an
electronic strip mall.
But Wired, cyber-libertarians, and e-commerce
enthusiasts reminded us all of the simple fact that the
Internet has infinite real estate. There's room for
everyone. Not so.
A group of International artists understood the threat
that consumerism, marketing, and stock market
speculation posed to Internet society and culture at
large. In 1994, they created ETOY -- an art project
designed to take place in the public sphere. It was
meant both as a satire of the corporate value system,
and a barometer of the information space. By selling
symbolic "stock certificates," for example, ETOY was
able to expose the ludicrous speculations and valuations
of the pyramid scheme otherwise known as the NASDAQ
exchange, where billions of dollars are made by people
with the best story or dot-com brand name. The ETOY
brand was created so that art might compete with
commerce.
Etoys, the e-commerce company, arrived online two
years after ETOY. But because they do "real" business
meaning they serve as a story through which
investment dollars may be accumulated the court and
Internic have decided to support their interests. In
1999, commerce takes precedence, and an artist can be
booted offline, illegitimately, illogically, and illegally.
But in an era when Time magazine's "Man of the Year"
is an E-commerce merchant who made zero from his
business but billions off his brand name's market cap,
this should not surprise us. As the European collective
we are here fighting for predicted, capitalism
accelerated by computers allows fiction to overtake
reality.
I've often been asked why ETOY did not accept the five
hundred thousand they were offered to change their
name. First, ETOY *is* its name. Would anyone have
asked Warhol to sell the right to use his own name on
his work? ETOY is a real project, and the value of its
name is intrinsic to the value of the whole piece. Over a
dozen artists have worked five years towards its
creation. You do the math. Second, for ETOY to accept
money to surrender art space to commercial space goes
against what these artists have dedicated their lives to.
If Etoys, the e-commerce company, wants to control
ETOY, the Internet agitprop experiment, they can buy
Etoy.shares like anyone else. ETOY will not, and should
not, submit to corporate blackmail.
ETOY's resistance demonstrates that the Bottom Line in
our civilization must not be the bottom line. ETOY will
not abandon its existing shareholders by taking the
money and running away. Unlike almost everyone else
in the Internet space, they have no "exit strategy"
because they are here to stay. And, unlike ETOYS, ETOY
is more than just a URL. The name is not for sale.
+ Save etoy now!
+ Save Leonardo now!
+
+
+
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