Stacey and a few others may recall this person coming to this NG
claiming to be a guru of another kind, with the aide of a "keyword
rich" script to create booku pages in order to be able to brag about
the supposed guru-ness with, and sharing (in his posts) about the guru
title mentioned in the article - ah, the humorous memories this NG
has from time to time.
Odd, he never bragged here about his license being revoked during his
prior guru-time-period - just "how good" he was at what he did, hence
his "guru-iness". Anyway ...
Someone else posted this to AWW a few days ago, so I am copying it
here for a few to read with their morning coffee or tea or whatever
they may be partaking at the time. I like the quote near the end .
State of Oregon delivers 'bill' to Web entrepreneur for allegedly
selling stock in an Internet based company for selling stock related
to
domain names without the proper license.
The local news agency that brought the story is "The Columbian" found
online at
http://www.columbian.com/
Temporary article link is
http://www.columbian.com/business/bu...006news941.cfm
__________________________________________________ ______
Previously: Vancouver resident Hans Wayne Schnauber formed Internet
company Zipee.com, which promised family-friendly Web surfing.
What's new: The state of Oregon alleges Schnauber owes $2.48 million
for selling interest in the company without a proper license.
What's next: Schnauber intends to fight the allegations.
__________________________________________________ ______
Local Web Entrepreneur in Hot Water
Oregon alleges shares of Zipee.com were sold without proper license
By JOHNATHAN NELSON
Columbian staff writer
Hans Wayne Schnauber, or the "Butterfly Guy" as he was once known,
allegedly owes the state of Oregon $2.48 million for selling shares of
a failed Internet company he formerly owned.
The "bill" arrived at Schnauber's Vancouver home Saturday, leaving the
46-year-old curious as to why Oregon, five years after revoking his
corporation's license, is now taking action.
It's another chapter in a peculiar trip that links Schnauber to the
late '90s heyday of the dot.com craze. He has alternately been
described as a champion of butterflies and a cybersquatter, someone
who
holds hostage domain names that are similar to legitimate Web
addresses
for large corporations.
Schnauber denies all allegations. He understood that he was licensed
to
sell interest in his Internet company, Zipee.com, and said the
cybersquatter label is inaccurate because he never tried to sell
domain
names back to companies.
"I'd give them their name back for free," he said.
The Oregon Department of Consumer and Business services sent Schnauber
an order that demands he and two business associates stop selling
securities in Oregon. The state also demands Schnauber pay $2.48
million in civil penalties.
The order alleges the Schnauber sold stock or "licenses" of Zipee.com
to 500 people, most of whom live in Oregon and Washington. Schnauber
told investors Zipee owned more than 2,000 Internet domain names that
took legitimate site names and replaced the "com" suffix with "org," a
designation normally used for nonprofit groups.
Schnauber told investors the companies would pay to get the names
back,
the order said.
The practice of cybersquatting made headlines in the 1990s as
legitimate sounding domain names like whitehouse.com often took
unsuspecting Web surfers to sites filled with pornographic content.
Others registered domain names similar to a corporation's correct
address and offered to give up the site for exorbitant fees.
A 1999 federal law that linked cybersquatting with trademark
infringement and increased vigilance by companies have dramatically
reduced such aggressive takeovers.
Back when Schnauber was snapping up names like timewarner.org or
espn.org, the founder of the International Federation of Butterfly
Enthusiasts said he was merely trying to highlight how companies are
helping or hurting the plight of butterflies.
He also said he was demonstrating that such Internet locations are
valuable.
The Wall Street Journal and trade publications appeared amused with
his
tactic. Time Warner executives saw little humor in the action and
demanded Schnauber release the names.
Schnauber denies he ever owned the names, just that he registered
them.
He plans to fight Oregon and says if he loses, he doesn't have $2.48
million sitting in a bank.
"I'm a strange kind of person," Schnauber said. "I'm not weird, but my
brain works differently."
__________________________________________________ ______