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OK let's assume you own cheese.co.uk.
Let's also assume that someone else owns cheese.com. Cheese is a generic word, but they use the "Cheese" brand for manufacturing and selling a certain type of microchip. So it's not known by mass market consumers, but those in certain electronic industries will probably have heard of it - not that this makes their trademark any less valid.
Moving on... You park cheese.co.uk with one of the popular parking providers and use the keyword of "cheese". You envisage that this will bring up adverts for different speciality cheeses, shops, manufacturers, etc - it is, afterall, a generic word.
However, lots of adverts for this type of microchip appear on the parking page because all of Cheese.com's competitors are PPC bidding on the "cheese" keyword. These adverts dominate the parking page, with maybe some Wensleydale / Cheddar / Edam right at the bottom.
Is this an open and shut case for an abusive registration? I'm thinking that it is. There's been plenty of DRS cases whereby the use of a parking page that shows adverts for a competitor's products etc has lost the respondent the case.
But in these cases, or rather in the ones that I have read, nobody seems to have argued "Well yes the adverts do appear, but it's actually the advertisers that are in the wrong - not me."
A purely hypothetical situation you understand - cheese.co.uk is nothing to do with me.
Interested in people's views on this or whether there's any DRS cases where this has been argued...
Ta
Let's also assume that someone else owns cheese.com. Cheese is a generic word, but they use the "Cheese" brand for manufacturing and selling a certain type of microchip. So it's not known by mass market consumers, but those in certain electronic industries will probably have heard of it - not that this makes their trademark any less valid.
Moving on... You park cheese.co.uk with one of the popular parking providers and use the keyword of "cheese". You envisage that this will bring up adverts for different speciality cheeses, shops, manufacturers, etc - it is, afterall, a generic word.
However, lots of adverts for this type of microchip appear on the parking page because all of Cheese.com's competitors are PPC bidding on the "cheese" keyword. These adverts dominate the parking page, with maybe some Wensleydale / Cheddar / Edam right at the bottom.
Is this an open and shut case for an abusive registration? I'm thinking that it is. There's been plenty of DRS cases whereby the use of a parking page that shows adverts for a competitor's products etc has lost the respondent the case.
But in these cases, or rather in the ones that I have read, nobody seems to have argued "Well yes the adverts do appear, but it's actually the advertisers that are in the wrong - not me."
A purely hypothetical situation you understand - cheese.co.uk is nothing to do with me.
Interested in people's views on this or whether there's any DRS cases where this has been argued...
Ta