PETA v. Doughney: When a Domain Name Is the Punchline, the Parody Defense Fails
The Fourth Circuit held that 'People Eating Tasty Animals' could not shield peta.org behind the First Amendment, because a domain identical to a mark conveys ownership before any visitor sees the joke.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals v. Doughney, Nos. 00-1918, 00-2289, 263 F.3d 359 (4th Cir. Aug. 23, 2001), is the decision that drew the line between a parody and a domain name that merely sets one up. Michael Doughney registered peta.org in 1995 and ran a site he called “People Eating Tasty Animals,” a send-up of the animal-rights group. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, in an opinion that has shaped a generation of domain-name disputes, held that the parody might exist — but not in the domain name itself, and that the trademark and Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act claims succeeded regardless of the humor on the page.
At a glance
- Case: People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals v. Doughney, Nos. 00-1918, 00-2289, 263 F.3d 359 (4th Cir. 2001)
- Court: U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
- Argued / Decided: May 7, 2001 / August 23, 2001
- Holding: The registrant infringed PETA’s mark and violated the ACPA; a parody defense requires that the mark and the parodic message be conveyed simultaneously, which a stand-alone domain name does not do
- Remedy: Surrender of peta.org; no monetary damages, because the domain was registered before the ACPA’s November 29, 1999 enactment
- Posture: Appeal from summary judgment for PETA in the Eastern District of Virginia
The facts: a domain registered before its target could claim it
In 1995, before PETA had secured its own dot-org, Doughney registered peta.org and built a site purporting to come from “People Eating Tasty Animals,” complete with links to sites selling leather, meat, and hunting equipment — the very products PETA campaigns against. When he registered the name with Network Solutions, Doughney represented that the registration did not infringe any third party’s rights and that a nonprofit called “People Eating Tasty Animals” was the registrant, although no such organization existed. He later suggested PETA should negotiate with him for the name. PETA sued for trademark infringement, unfair competition, and cybersquatting. The district court granted summary judgment for PETA, and Doughney appealed.
The two-step parody analysis: a domain name speaks before the website loads
The heart of the opinion is its treatment of parody as a defense to trademark infringement. The Fourth Circuit accepted the established principle that a successful parody must “convey two simultaneous — and contradictory — messages: that it is the original, but also that it is not the original and is instead a parody.” The trick is simultaneity. A parody works because the audience perceives the reference and the mockery at the same instant.
A domain name, the court reasoned, cannot do that. A user who types or encounters peta.org receives only one message at that moment: that the site is PETA’s. The contradictory, parodic message — “this is actually a joke at PETA’s expense” — arrives only after the user has navigated to the site and read its content. Because the domain name itself conveyed nothing but apparent ownership by the markholder, it was not a parody. The court therefore declined to look past the domain to the site’s satirical content for purposes of the parody defense; the relevant communication was the address, and the address simply said “PETA.”
That framing matters because it decouples the infringement question from the content of the speech. Doughney’s site may well have been protected satire, but the use of the mark as the domain name was the infringing act, and the joke on the page could not cure it.
Likelihood of confusion and the use “in connection with goods or services”
The court applied a conventional likelihood-of-confusion analysis and found infringement. PETA owned a strong, registered mark; the domain was identical to that mark; and an internet user seeking PETA would reasonably expect peta.org to be PETA’s site. The court also addressed the requirement that the infringing use be “in connection with goods or services.” It held the requirement satisfied because Doughney’s site linked to numerous commercial operations and because his conduct prevented users from reaching PETA’s own goods and services — a theory that the act of misdirection itself supplies the necessary commercial nexus, even where the defendant sells nothing directly.
This reasoning would later be tested and narrowed. The Ninth Circuit in Bosley Medical Institute v. Kremer, 403 F.3d 672 (9th Cir. 2005), and the Fourth Circuit’s own later decision in Lamparello v. Falwell, 420 F.3d 309 (4th Cir. 2005), read the commercial-use and confusion requirements more protectively for genuine, noncommercial gripe and criticism sites. Doughney remains distinguishable on its facts: Doughney’s links to commercial vendors and his overtures to PETA pushed the case toward bad-faith commercial exploitation rather than pure speech.
Bad faith under the ACPA — and why damages were unavailable
On the cybersquatting claim, the court walked through the ACPA’s nine nonexclusive bad-faith factors, §1125(d)(1)(B)(i). Several pointed sharply against Doughney: he had no trademark or other rights in “PETA,” the name was not derived from his own legal name, he made no bona fide noncommercial or fair use of the mark in a site that the domain itself identified as criticism, and — most tellingly — he indicated PETA should make him an offer for the domain, the classic marker of intent to profit. The court found the requisite bad-faith intent to profit and affirmed ACPA liability.
As in Sporty’s Farm, however, the remedy was limited by timing. Because Doughney had registered peta.org before the ACPA’s November 29, 1999 effective date, the statute’s monetary remedies did not reach his conduct; he was ordered to surrender the domain but owed no ACPA damages. The transfer-yes/damages-no pattern for pre-enactment registrations thus recurs across the early cybersquatting canon.
Open questions
- How much commercial linkage is enough? Doughney found the “in connection with goods or services” element satisfied partly through links to third-party vendors. Later gripe-site cases asked how attenuated that commercial connection can be before the element fails.
- Does the parody rule survive obvious add-ons? The opinion turned on a bare, identical domain. It left open how courts treat domains that signal criticism on their face — fallwell.com, walmartsucks.com — a question the Fourth Circuit confronted four years later in Lamparello.
- Where does misdirection end and speech begin? Treating the act of diverting users as the commercial nexus is powerful for markholders but risks sweeping in legitimate criticism that happens to occupy a confusingly similar address.
Implications
- For brand owners: A domain identical to a registered mark is vulnerable even when the underlying site is plainly satirical; the address, not the content, frames the infringement and cybersquatting inquiry.
- For satirists and critics: Hosting a parody is not a license to occupy the markholder’s exact domain. Signaling the joke in the domain itself, or choosing an address no one would mistake for the official site, is the safer path.
- For litigators: Evidence that a registrant invited the markholder to buy the domain is potent proof of bad-faith intent to profit under the ACPA’s factors.
- For remedy planning: Pre-1999 registrations support transfer but not ACPA damages — a recurring limit that affects the value of a cybersquatting claim.
Frequently asked questions
Why didn’t the parody defense save Doughney? Because a successful parody must deliver the reference and the mockery at the same moment. A domain name identical to the mark conveys only apparent ownership; the joke appears only after the visitor loads the site, so the domain name itself was not a parody.
Did PETA recover money damages? No. Doughney registered peta.org before the ACPA took effect on November 29, 1999, so the statute’s monetary remedies did not apply. He was ordered to surrender the domain.
Is PETA v. Doughney inconsistent with later gripe-site rulings? It is distinguishable rather than overruled. Doughney’s links to commercial vendors and his suggestion that PETA buy the domain marked his use as commercial and bad-faith, unlike the noncommercial criticism sites later protected in Bosley and Lamparello.
Authorities and sources
- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals v. Doughney, 263 F.3d 359 (4th Cir. 2001): https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-4th-circuit/1181854.html
- Harvard Berkman Center materials, PETA v. Doughney: https://cyber.harvard.edu/ilaw/DomainNames/PETA.htm
- Quimbee case brief, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals v. Doughney, 263 F.3d 359 (2001): https://www.quimbee.com/cases/people-for-the-ethical-treatment-of-animals-v-doughney
- Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, “First Amendment does not protect parody website name”: https://www.rcfp.org/first-amendment-does-not-protect-parody-website-name/
- Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(d): https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/15/1125