- Joined
- Dec 25, 2004
- Posts
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- 375
I agree with the outcome of this case since the complainant did have a trademark and Respondent did not submit a reply:
http://www.nic.uk/digitalAssets/17202_jack-daniels.pdf
However what is interesting is....
The experts uses the "offer to sell the name" against the respondent:
Then the experts suggests the "sponsored links" are abusive:
Then he uses the Tony Willoughby four stage test from the decision in Chivas Brothers Limited -v- David William Plenderleith (DRS 00292):
All three of these issues above appear on the current DRS review:
http://www.nominet.org.uk/policy/consultations/updatedrs/webversion/
- a general offer to resell a domain name
- sale of traffic
- Incorporate tests set out in previous decisions that experts routinely rely or are likely to rely on (because they were in appeal decisions) so the information is in one place.
So if the DRS policy is changed to allow the first two, but the third is also accepted what happens in cases like this then?
However DRS 00292 the "Chivas case test" is NOT a appeal decision: http://www.nic.uk/digitalAssets/1027_chivasbrothers.pdf
http://www.nic.uk/digitalAssets/17202_jack-daniels.pdf
However what is interesting is....
The experts uses the "offer to sell the name" against the respondent:
I am persuaded that possible sale of the domain name to the Complainant or its competitors was in the mind of the Respondent at the time when he registered the domain name.
Then the experts suggests the "sponsored links" are abusive:
Was the Domain Name in this case registered “primarily” for this purpose? I do not know, but there in one factor that would suggest that it may not have been. For example, the website operating from the Domain Name includes a large number of “sponsored links”. This suggests that the Respondent registered the Domain Name in order to set up such a website in the hope that internet users looking for the Complainant would inadvertently find their way to the Respondent’s website and in turn use these links thereby earning “click through” revenue for the Respondent.
Then he uses the Tony Willoughby four stage test from the decision in Chivas Brothers Limited -v- David William Plenderleith (DRS 00292):
All four limbs of the Chivas Case test are satisfied in this case and consequently, even without the additional evidence that I have described in this decision, it is reasonable to infer that the purpose of the registration was abusive.
All three of these issues above appear on the current DRS review:
http://www.nominet.org.uk/policy/consultations/updatedrs/webversion/
- a general offer to resell a domain name
- sale of traffic
- Incorporate tests set out in previous decisions that experts routinely rely or are likely to rely on (because they were in appeal decisions) so the information is in one place.
So if the DRS policy is changed to allow the first two, but the third is also accepted what happens in cases like this then?
However DRS 00292 the "Chivas case test" is NOT a appeal decision: http://www.nic.uk/digitalAssets/1027_chivasbrothers.pdf