Kessler Introduces Web.Sweep
NEW
YORK -- July 16, 1998 (XPN) -- The Internet is a legal battlefield
these days over copyright issues. In May this year the Senate approved
the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, a bill that would implement
two international copyright treaties adopted in 1996 by the United
Nations' World Intellectual Property Organization. The treaties
cover property rights over written material, sound recordings and
software in the online community and, in many cases, restrict access
to private use of copyright protected materials online.
"Internet
users think nothing of downloading a photo and sending it as an
e-mail attachment or greeting to a friend or colleague with a few
keystrokes. Others link directly to intellectual property online,"
says Michael Kessler whose firm Kessler & Associates investigates
online theft of licensed copyrights and trademarks. "Soon consumers
may have to adjust to a pay-per-view online environment and companies
will have to be diligent in applying protections and monitoring
use."
To assist publishers, companies and their legal representatives
in protecting intellectual assets, Kessler & Associates uses
a new proprietary search program they have developed called Web.Sweep.
Web.Sweep detects unauthorized uses of company names, essential
phrases and can detect libelous statements made by competitors or
disgruntled customers. Web.Sweep searches the entire World Wide
Web including Usenet, commercial online services, newsgroups (archived
at a Web site) and discussion lists.
Web.Sweep
is more advanced than online search engines because using the supplied
word or phrase, it returns a Web address plus up to 50 words of
text showing the exact context of the use in question. Web.Sweep
virtually eliminates the need to click through to each of the individual
sites or discussion list archives to evaluate the use. "If
a competitor is bashing a company or its product, Web.Sweep will
return the exact language as written by that person. Cease &
Desist letters can be issued by Kessler or an attorney can follow
through with legal action if warranted," says Kessler. Web.Sweep
can make daily or monthly periodic checks on appropriate uses of
intellectual property, and even check prices of manufactured goods
to verify that terms of sales agreements are being followed.
Web.Sweep
reports are published online with password protection enabled for
viewing by clients. Each use of the search criteria is numbered
with a hyperlink to the site where the use has been appropriated.
"A company's presence on the Web affords fast access to its
intellectual property and brand identity including: copyrights,
trademarks, trade dress, service marks and licensed properties,"
says Kessler. "On the Internet everyone's a publisher, company
logos are stolen, reputations and products are easily libeled and,
in most cases, the company's executives are not aware of it. On
the plus side technology now enables investigators to follow what
is sometimes a nicely laid out e-trail which didn't exist in the
past."
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