In contrast to the Court of Appeals' 2001 opinion in
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals v. Doughney, where the Court affirmed the District Court's judgment against the defendant, this case supported the defendant, ruling against one gripe site and for the other. In
PETA, the parody website's content was not conveyed simultaneously with the message that the site was peta.org. In short, the Fourth Circuit backtracked on its decision in
PETA, justifying the different opinions as a distinction between parody and consumer confusion. Additionally, in both
PETA and
Lamparello, the website in question had links to items for sale. The distinction between the two cases may have been that in
PETA, the defendant registered numerous other websites for
cybersquatting purposes. The utilization of the bad-faith factors of the
ACPA has been criticized by some scholars for leading to counterintuitive results when applied to cases that are not clear-cut
cybersquatting. Perhaps the Court of Appeals has created a lesson here for counsel representing parties who might assert cyber squatting claims. Before filing suit, initiate bad faith settlement negotiations, for the purpose of obtaining a statement from the cyber squatter that he might be willing to settle. Then, file suit under the ACPA, asserting that your opponent's willingness to engage in your bad faith settlement negotiations demonstrates a bad faith intent to profit on his part. This opinion is important when considering
typosquatting and
gripe sites as it upheld Fifth and Sixth Circuit decisions that "the use of a mark in a domain name for a gripe site criticizing the markholder does not constitute cybersquatting." This opinion contained direct analysis of application of the
Initial Interest Confusion doctrine, but leaves questions regarding the IIC unanswered. ==See also==