Obviously, Twitter is right to do this, since the domain is likely to cause some confusion, although we should note Twitter hasn’t managed to secure a trademark for the term ‘twitter’ in the United States so far, despite multiple attempts.
Nevertheless, Twitter has a popular search product that bears the obvious name Twitter Search, so I’d do the exact same thing if I were them.
That said, they took their sweet time to make the move – twittersearch.com was first registered back in March 2007.
A quick WHOIS search reveals that the owner of the contested domain name has opted to hide his or her identity, and the domain name is currently inactive, leading to a placeholder page riddled with ads.
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