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| The International Media | ||||||
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Naseem is annually featured in over 100 articles worldwide, following
are some selected articles. |
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| "What
you call your company can determine whether it flops or flourishes"
says Javed. Report on Business, Dec. 11, 2000 Full story |
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| "Open
a 5-year-old computer magazine, and it reads like a cemetery of bad names"
says Javed. San Jose Mercury News, Dec. 05, 2000 Full story |
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| "First
come and first serve is the wrong way to approach it" says Javed. Atari online News, Nov. 17, 2000 Full story |
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| "First
come and first serve is the wrong way to approach it" says Javed. The Economic Times, Nov. 15, 2000 Full story |
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"First
come and first serve is the wrong way to approach it" says Javed. Reuters, Nov. 14, 2000 Full story |
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| "First
come and first serve is the wrong way to approach it" says Javed. TechTV, Nov. 14, 2000 Full story |
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| "You
cannot let one group like travel have a domain, but not a group like hotels"
says Javed. San Francisco Chronicle, Nov. 11, 2000 Full story |
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| "Right
now, a good domain name goes for $1 million a letter" says Javed. eBusiness Journal, Nov. 08, 2000 Full story |
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| "the
mission statement may be to provide the best quality nutritional products"
says Javed. The Self-Employment Doctor, Nov. 04, 2000 Full story |
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"Companies will soon be engrossed in a new round of cybersquatting and trademark litigation " says Javed. San Francisco Business Times, Nov. 24, 2000 |
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"90%
of company names are slowly chipping away the company assets " says
Naseem Javed. e-Business, Toronto, Nov. 2000 |
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"A lot can go wrong with a simple corporate name " says Javed. EnRoute Magazine, Nov. 2000 |
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"First come, first served, is the wrong way to approach the domain ", said Naseem Javed. ZDnet, U.K., Nov. 14, 2000 |
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I-CANN be a squatter too:. " This is a fiasco in the making " said Javed. San Francisco Business Times, Nov. 3, 2000 |
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" The Internet domain name snag could make future e-business forays awkward for the renamed company " said Javed. Globe and Mail, Sept. 29, 2000 |
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" There isn’t a shortage of names, only expertise," Javed said. " It’s like saying we are out of songs." Financial Post, Sept. 29, 2000 |
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" Companies are threatened if a variation of their domain name is in the wrong hands", said Javed, Washington Post, Sept. 8, 2000 |
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"The rise and fall of dot.com names is like the fall of "data"and "info" in the late 70's" says Javed. Forbes, Sept. 8, 2000 |
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"Domain Name Game called greed: Millions of dollars are being wasted every hour" Naseem Javed. Seattle Times, Aug. 29, 2000 |
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"For Janet Reno to change the name of FBI's 'Carnivore', Javed's suggestion: "Big Sister", Associated Press, DC, Aug. 9, 2000 |
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Javed said "Less than 1% names are good, clean, unique, powerful and ‘trademark able’ around the globe". Via Magazine, July, 2000 |
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Says Mr. Javed:
"Asian businesses usually named their company after a lucky animal or objects." Asian Wall Street Journal, Hong Kong Mar. 27, 2000 |
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"Naming is not a creative exercise these days," says Naseem Javed, "It's become a highly tactical manoeuvre." National Post, Toronto, Ontario Mar. 17, 2000 Full story |
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"After six months the sizzle will go out because the same law that allows you to register a name allows all your competitors to register the same name with slight variations," said Naseem Javed. San Fernando Valley Business Journal, San Fernando Valley, CA Mar. 6, 2000 Full story |
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"Just five years ago there were only 5,000 domain names," said Naseem Javed, "Today there are 11,000 new ones a day." Brandweek, New York Feb. 21, 2000 |
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" There is no way to protect yourself against squatting," said Javed. The only solution is to get the right name in the first place.? IT Daily, Hong Kong Feb. 8, 2000 Full story |
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"Seven taboos to avoid in naming" according to Naseem Javed. &Sing Tao Daily, Jan. 29, 2000 |
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" In the U.S., rather than well-defined policies for domain registration system, we created a billion-name universe," Javed said. Reuters, Asia, Jan. 27, 2000 Full story |
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" 99% of domain names can be seriously challenged because they do not conform to trademark laws," says Javed. South China Morning Post, Hong Kong Jan. 26, 2000 Full story |
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"And if you have a domain name without a trademark, it will change, you will lose it," Mr. Javed said. Hong Kong Standard, Hong Kong Jan. 26, 2000 Full story |
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"Putting an 'i' in front of such a terribly cumbersome domain name isn't a
very thoughtful approach," said Naseem Javed. Asian Wall Street Journal, Hong Kong Jan. 25, 2000 Full story |
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