Another nail in the UK domain catching industry
No, utterly irrelevant to the domain catching industry.
Not every news story has to be of the doom-and-gloom, sky-is-falling type!
The DRS decision is fair enough, it looks like. You don't have to have a registered trademark to have unregistered rights in a name that are valid at DRS, and "ash wales" has never been anything even remotely close to generic (despite the losing party reverse engineering an "explanation" for why they registered it).
Although I do not catch domain based on PR and backlinks, it looks like some do.
I would have thought that a period of ownership of a domain that is now expired, being grounds to get that domain back, would effect a certain
amount of catches, if the pervious owner found out that in future that the domain was worth something.
...What makes this case different for me when reading the BBC account, is the fact that the previous owner owned a domain that expired and used that prior ownership to make their DRS case, which I have not seen before.
Another nail in the UK domain catching industry
I wonder if under the new registrar agreement, if passed, the large registrars would fight any claim for "abusive registration" if in the words of the judgement the name was used "for a significant period of time" and its lack of a trademark against the name at the time was "not determinative".
Even if they sold it on, could DRS action be taken by the expired registrant against the new original registrant for compensation or the return of the domain?
No idea what you are arguing but ash is a well known charity so it seems the correct decision.
As far as I can see, the main grounds were not that the domain had previously been used, it was that the previous registrant is still trading under the term (albeit on an alternative extension) and therefore has rights in that term. The fact that they previously owned the domain just backs up their case, if they hadn't previously owned it and the respondent had just registered it and done the same, he still would've lost the domain.
It's like Apple deciding to just use the .com, dropping apple.co.uk by accident and the new owner setting up a shop selling windows pc's, a completely idiotic move.
Personally I don't think it makes any difference to dropcatching at all.
Grant
"I therefore find that the Complainant does have rights in the name ASH WALES being a name which is identical to the Domain name, ignoring the .co.uk suffix."
Two rival caravan dealers from Perthshire engaged in a bitter feud over internet real estate they both claimed was theirs.
Perthshire Caravans, who say they have used that name since 1936, accused arch competitors Dicksons of Perth of confusing potential customers by snapping up the perthcaravans.co.uk web domain.
But Dicksons fiercely denied digitally aping the opposition, insisting that the online address simply “seemed appropriate for selling caravans in Perth”.
Nominet, the body that polices internet domain names in the UK, has now dismissed Perthshire Caravans’ complaint after ruling that the firm, of Dundee Road, Errol, had no trademark on the name and had failed to come up with the evidence needed to prove its case.
they just wanted to use the domain for it's links, links gained by the previous owners use.
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