Cohen received media attention because of a
legal dispute with Apple over the domain name iTunes.co.uk. In November 2000, two weeks after
Apple lodged its UK trademark application for the term 'iTunes', Cohen's company CyberBritain Group registered the iTunes.co.uk domain name and redirected it to a music search engine. Cohen's company's actions were considered to be "abusive" by the independent expert appointed by the arbiter
Nominet and his company was required to transfer the domain name to Apple. In 2001, Cohen was involved with a search engine for internet pornography (hunt4porn.com) which formed part of his CyberBritain.com
internet portal. Cohen was reported as stating that CyberBritain company revenue was £12,000 per month at this time. The company filed a
Companies House return showing a total yearly profit of £165 up to 31 March 2001. In his 2001 book
Dot.Bomb,
Rory Cellan-Jones wrote: "Whatever you may think of Benjamin Cohen, you have to admire his ability to manipulate the media. The increasingly outlandish values put on his flimsy company merely reflected the mood of the time. But then some of the bigger dot.coms, which managed to sell shares based on even more outlandish valuations, were to prove equally flimsy". His
Channel 4 News profile describes him as having been the youngest-ever director of a public company. In 2006 he joined
Channel 4 News as a technology correspondent at the age of 23, the youngest correspondent to have been appointed in the programme's history. He produced investigations during his time at
Channel 4 News, including an award-winning exposé of security flaws in contactless credit card use. Cohen writes for
PinkNews regularly, which he created in 2005. Between 2004 and 2006, Cohen wrote a column on
e-business for
The Times under the heading "dot.com millionaire". == Charitable work ==