Canadian teenager Mike Rowe, who shot to fame last week, after Microsoft decided to threaten him for registering and using the domain name MikeRoweSoft.com, has settled out of court with the software ...
(CNN) --Mike Rowe just wanted to keep MikeRoweSoft.com running. But the 17-year-old student and Web designer from Victoria, British Columbia, has attracted worldwide attention after refusing to comply ...
Teenage Web developer Mike Rowe, who was threatened with legal action by Microsoft, has been overwhelmed with support from Internet users and has set up a defence fund to allow him to fight back. Rowe ...
A Canadian teenager whose Web site address bothered a certain giant software company will find a new home on the Web, Microsoft Corp. said Friday. Mike Rowe, 17, of Victoria, British Columbia, has ...
A B.C. teenager who irked Microsoft Corp. with a cheeky Internet domain name has taken down his website, although not because of legal action. Mike Rowe of Victoria had registered his site as ...
The teen who laughed in the face of Microsoft's $10 offer for his cheeky mikerowesoft.com domain name kept cool Thursday playing the Xbox the company eventually coughed up in compensation. In between ...
Microsoft says it may have been overaggressive in threatening Web entrepreneur Mike Rowe over the name of his Web site, Mikerowesoft.com. Rowe, a 17-year-old student from Vancouver, British Columbia, ...
Mike Rowe, a 17-year-old resident of Victoria, British Columbia, has agreed to pick a new name for his website, currently called www.mikerowesoft.com, said Microsoft spokesman Jim Desler on Friday.
Trademark law may not be his strong suit, but Canadian high school student Mike Rowe appears to have a promising future in public relations. Microsoft Corp. conceded yesterday that it may have taken ...