Word: domain
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...trademark dispute between Harvard and notHarvard.com, an online educational website, erupted into a flurry of litigation after notHarvard asked a court in Texas to declare its domain name doesn't infringe on the University's trademark...
...press release, notHarvard asserted that it adopted the domain name in good faith, has taken appropriate measures to secure rights to the name, and attempted to negotiate the dispute with the University prior to taking legal action...
...company adopts a domain name, and is subsequently forced to abandon it, the result could be catastrophic to the enterprise," Fisher said. "NotHarvard doesn't want to be in a position a year or two from now in losing a trademark suit initiated by Harvard and then being forced to abandon its name...
...forget them, to forget their names, their styles of presentation. And only by this means, this un-naming, could the penetration of Nature--things as they really are, the silent mysteries beyond nomenclature--really begin. This was Chardin's enterprise, and in a certain sense--particularly in the domain of inanimate objects rather than the expressive human face--he can be said to be the first artist to take on its full weight...
...same, it is a dramatic picture--almost a narrative, thanks to the cat making its move on the oysters--and Chardin's finest moments lay much more in the domain of stillness, where nothing "happens" at all. We know practically nothing of Chardin's character or emotional predilections, yet we can't help sensing that no artist could have been better equipped to paint still life. (Actually, he's not unlike the cat in his own seafood paintings, fastidiously stalking, with bright-eyed attention, something that cannot move but can go stale.) Everything comes to matter under his level scrutiny...