Judge reiterates demand that Canvas.com stop using its domain…tomorrow!

Canvas will have to switch domain names by tomorrow.

Not the actual judge.

Perhaps you can forgive United States District Judge Dale A. Kimball for not understanding what goes into changing a web platform’s domain name. But the engineers at Canvas’ headquarters probably won’t.

Today, Kimball denied (pdf) a request by Canvas to stay an injunction he approved against the company. The denial means that Canvas has to rebrand its company and change domain names by 15 days after he made the injunction — tomorrow.

Kimball thinks it’s no big deal. If it ends up winning the case, it will just be a “temporary rebrand.”

He notes that Canvas already rebranded last year from Jumpstart and changed its domain from Jumpstart.me to Canvas.com. Sure, it took six months, but how hard can it be just to flip the switch back?

In addition, Canvas Tech has rebranded before – when it changed from Jumpstart to Canvas. Although that initial rebrand took six months, it is unlikely to take Canvas Tech that
long again. Canvas Tech’s mission and services this time will, presumedly, stay the same. All that must change is the branding itself. Since Canvas Tech still owns and retains the website and infrastructure for Jumpstart, the court is unconvinced that Canvas Tech will need much time at all to temporarily rebrand.

Second, the court believes that Canvas Tech’s claimed harm to its customers is exaggerated. Presently, Canvas Tech’s www.jumpstart.me domain is used by Canvas Tech to
automatically redirect users to www.canvas.com. To comply with the preliminary injunction, Canvas Tech could use the www.jumpstart.me domain again, without redirecting the users.
Canvas Tech can also announce the new rebrand through a post on its platform.

Let’s look at that last sentence again: Canvas Tech can also announce the new rebrand through a post on its platform.

Oh, you mean the platform hosted at Canvas.com?

Hopefully, the judge won’t split hairs over using Canvas.com. At a minimum, the business needs to be able to redirect it to another domain and forward emails destined for the @canvas.com email addresses. Otherwise, its business will be irreparably harmed (if you believe that changing domains tomorrow won’t irreparably harm the company.)

I’m not a judge or a lawyer. Perhaps Instructure, the company that filed the dispute, has a good case. It seemed marginal to me, but maybe the evidence will show otherwise. Still, it baffles me that a judge would unilaterally force a company to stop using its domain within 15 days in these circumstances. When we look at UDPR, we complain that the panelists can only choose to approve or deny a transfer. There’s nothing in between, like requiring a domain owner to put a note on a page that says the companies are not affiliated as a stopgap during a dispute like this.

Post link: Judge reiterates demand that Canvas.com stop using its domain…tomorrow!

© DomainNameWire.com 2021. This is copyrighted content. Domain Name Wire full-text RSS feeds are made available for personal use only, and may not be published on any site without permission. If you see this message on a website, contact editor (at) domainnamewire.com. Latest domain news at DNW.com: Domain Name Wire.

Original article: Judge reiterates demand that Canvas.com stop using its domain…tomorrow!

©2022 Domain Observer. All Rights Reserved.

Website Host Review

Recent Posts

Inside Quantica’s Plan to Prepare Big Sky Campus for Future Power Demand

TL;DR Quantica Infrastructure filed interconnection applications with NorthWestern Energy tied to future power generation capacity…

3 days ago

Hudson IX Continues 60 Hudson Growth with Second 1 MW Data Hall and Roadmap Beyond 10 MW

TL;DR New high density inventory at 60 Hudson: Hudson InterXchange (Hudson IX) plans to bring…

3 days ago

Capacity allocation and the next generation of AI-era KPIs

AI workloads are reshaping data center infrastructure at an unprecedented scale. Rack densities exceeding 50…

4 days ago

Green Capital and Prime Capital Partner on 300 MW Battery Storage Portfolio in Poland

TL;DR Green Capital S.A. and Prime Capital AG are partnering to develop a 300 MW…

5 days ago

Aureon and Partners Deliver 100 Tb Midwest Route to Support AI and Cloud Growth

TL;DR New long-haul route: Aureon and partners deliver a 100 Tb transport network across the…

5 days ago

Secure, Fast, Reliable: The Best Cloud Storage Providers for Businesses in 2026

This guide is for IT leaders, business owners, and operations teams looking to improve data…

6 days ago