domaingenius said:
You would need to think carefully and concisely what EXACT claim you were considering against Nominet .It would be pointless going to the Court and simply averring that the terms & conditions were not fair. The Court would say "so what".
I still cannot understand, unless there is actually an ulterior motive, why Nominet wont allow someone like Patent Office to run the DRS.
DG
You'd have to clue me as to what ulterior motive you think there could be, cos I can't see why there would be one. Nominet has always offered a dispute resolution service of sorts; the DRS introduced in 2001 was a newer improved version of the old system.
As a matter of interest, the first decision under the DRS was handed down in December 2001. Eli Lilly owned a trade mark XIGRIS. A former employee registered xigris.co.uk. The independent expert appointed under Nominet’s DRS found that the former employee had not been justified in registering the domain and ordered its transfer to Eli Lilly. Factors taken into account included:
* The domain comprised a distinctive made up name
* It was identical to Eli Lilly’s trade mark
* The respondent was a former employee of Eli Lilly
* Eli Lilly had not given permission for the registration.
What I wonder about is this. If it has been in operation since September 2001 (and since 1997 in another form) why are people now so dead set against Nominet running it in today's much more convoluted webspace? It seems to me it is only since the advent of fora like Acorn Domains (a bunch of like-minded stakeholders debating stuff on a fairly subjective level) that these kinds of overt criticisms of the DRS have come to the fore. Is that because the DRS affects mostly domainers? Or didn't anybody think much about it until a couple or so years ago?
As an aside, I read somewhere today that the UDRP finds in favour of around 80% of complainants. Does that make the UDRP flawed too or is Nominet's DRS just a softer target? Go on, surprise me, be brutally honest with yourself!
There's an interesting viewpoint from Sept. 2001 (just after the new DRS was introduced) from Keiran McCarthy
The Register which points out that Nominet has always run a Dispute Resolution Service of sorts since 1997. So it isn't that this is a new thing for Nominet, it's just that some people seem to have latched on to the differences between UDRP and DRS. Yet Kieran McCarthy (often an outspoken critic of Nominet) actually writes that ICANN could maybe learn a thing or two from Nominet and its DRS approach. You guys can make your own minds up.
Bearing in mind that Nominet itself does not actually make the decisions in DRS cases, I see no difference between independent Experts (a term I hate by the way) and the Patent Office resolving these disputes. Personally I think you might find a whole different set of criteria being introduced by a government agency but maybe that's a different problem.
I accept you do not feel likewise.
Regards
James Conaghan