Uniform Domain Name Resolution Policy
- October 21, 2011
Ordinarily, a domain name registered prior to the complainant’s acquisition of a trademark could not have been registered in bad…
, - October 19, 2011
“Given the human capacity for mischief in all its forms” (said one Panel) “the Policy sensibly takes an open-ended approach…
, - October 14, 2011
Free speech is not listed as one of the Policy's examples of a right or legitimate interest in a domain…
- October 12, 2011
Paragraph 4(a)(i) of the Policy is not satisfied by simply showing that the trademark and the domain name bear a…
, - October 7, 2011
That a domain name is identical or confusingly similar to a complainant's trademark is only part of the evidentiary journey.…
- October 5, 2011
Panels early recognized that complainant could likely not marshal conclusive proof that respondent lacked rights or legitimate interests in the…
, - September 30, 2011
When it comes to fan sites there are two views, the tolerant and the intolerant. The intolerant is illustrated in…
, - September 28, 2011
Panels have long put to rest the argument that re-registration (or renewal of) is equivalent to registration, although there continue…
, - September 24, 2011
Co-author Gerald M. Levine The dead are beyond suing but wariness about the living in recollecting the past should not…
, , , , - September 23, 2011
It is often pointed out that small differences (such as adding or subtracting plural suffixes) matter in determining whether a…
, - September 21, 2011
Surnames may qualify as trademarks, but to the extent they are common (and provided that there is no intent to…
- September 17, 2011
Co-author Gerald M. Levine The U.S. Supreme Court has described fair use as "a privilege in others than the owner…
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