Apple has won the domain iPhone5.com after filing a complaint with the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) over it. While it doesn't necessarily mean the next iPhone will be called "iPhone 5," it's likely part of Apple's strategy to exert some kind of control over the conversation about its next smartphone.
The domain had previously been registered to a company in Australia, but it now belongs to Corporation Service Company in Wilmington, Del., a domain-name registrar company. As The Next Web first reported, Apple probably contracted the Corporation Service Company's services to take ownership of the domain.
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Currently, visitors of iPhone5.com
are greeted by a completely blank page, without even a single note or
"under construction" notice. Before it was shut down, the site
campaigned to have the domain stay independent, telling visitors, "Call
Corporate Of Apple and tell them to stop there persuit!! Blow up there
phones, Spam there emails, call there Administration! Do something to
get our point across.[sic]"
It's not the first time Apple has
publicly wrestled over domain-name ownership prior to a major product
launch. Shortly before Apple first unveiled iCloud in 2011, it obtained
the iCloud.com domain from Xcerion, a Swedish software company. In that
case, the exchange was amicable, with Apple reportedly paying $4.5 million for the URL.
While the term "iPhone 5" has
been used as the default name for the next iPhone, the domain switch
doesn't mean that will be the official name of the product. Technically,
it will be the sixth model of iPhone released by Apple, and with the
last iPad launch, Apple eschewed any kind of suffix for the product
name, numerical or otherwise.
Whatever Apple calls the next
iPhone, the site iPhone5.com won't show up in searches for the term, or
if it does users won't see any information -- real or made-up -- about
the product. While there will be no shortage of rumors and speculation
in the run up to release, Apple's goal may be to simply deprive casual
web users of the most obvious hub they would use to look for info.
This article comes from:http://news.yahoo.com/apple-wins-iphone5-com-domain-130716813.html;_ylt=A2KJjam2_rVPIX4AyWLQtDMD
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