Abusive registration
- January 11, 2013
Respondent’s burden of persuasion under paragraph 4(a)(ii) of the Policy is disjunctive. It satisfies the requirement if it has either…
, - January 3, 2013
There is not an available, corresponding domain name for every trademark so it would seem prudential for a party before…
, , - December 27, 2012
In a federal action under 15 U.S.C. 8131 (Cyberpiracy protections for individuals) the district court for the Middle District of…
, , - December 4, 2012
Complainants cannot claim standing for intent to use applications since the first use in commerce is prospective. This applies to…
, , - November 25, 2012
Registering surnames for operating a vanity email service is a legitimate business model. The problem comes when the trademark is…
, - November 22, 2012
The Report of the Second WIPO Internet Domain Name Process, The Recognition of Rights and the Use of Names In…
, , - November 16, 2012
Domain names composed of few letters are extremely prized; the more so as the number of third parties legitimately claiming…
, - November 4, 2012
It makes a difference which party initiates a negotiation to sell or purchase a disputed domain name. In SIX Group…
, - October 29, 2012
Respondent’s default to some extent lightens complainant’s burden to prove knowledge and intent while its appearance and rebuttal testimony heightens…
, - October 18, 2012
While merely registering and holding a domain name confers no right or legitimate interest, a domain name can be legitimized…
, - October 6, 2012
Panels in the formative cases held that there was “no room for general equitable doctrines under the Policy such as…
, - September 27, 2012
See Anthology of Commentaries -- 2014 Question 2.4 of the WIPO Overview of WIPO Panel Views on Selected U.D.R.P. Questions…
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