Membership is FREE, giving all registered users unlimited access to every Acorn Domains feature, resource, and tool! Optional membership upgrades unlock exclusive benefits like profile signatures with links, banner placements, appearances in the weekly newsletter, and much more - customized to your membership level!

Intellectual Property (Unjustified Threats) Act 2017

Joined
Apr 5, 2005
Posts
9,729
Reaction score
1,311
Has anyone come across the "Intellectual Property (Unjustified Threats) Act 2017"?

It is a new law that seems to have been passed last year, giving more/less/different* protection against frivolous claims of trademark infringement.

(*I've read a dozen different notes about it on lawfirm websites, and I still can't quite get my head around it. The legal jargon's just too dense.)

Anyway, I was hoping somebody on here has first-hand experience and could spell out what it means for domain names?

Here's the original text of the Act
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2017/14/contents/enacted
 
Gov.uk has some information in lay terms:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publi...-for-smes/ip-unjustified-threats-act-for-smes

It looks like it does offer additional protection against frivolous claims (in the form of damages or an injunction).

I'm not sure what the exact implications would be for domain names. As Nominet's DRS guidelines point out, a company might be able to demonstrate that they would have the right to use a name but still lose a DRS review.

For example, Widgets Ltd might have registered the trademark "Acme London" in classes 1,2 and 4 back in 2001. Gadgets R Us Ltd might register the name acme.co.uk today and start selling items in classes 15,16 and 19. In this situation it's reasonable that both firms have a valid claim and Widgets Ltd might be justified in seeking a DRS decision - even if they then lose.

My interpretation is that the Act is attempting to guide copyright owners towards:
  • establishing that they do have a valid claim before pursuing action
  • avoiding causing undue reputational damage to those that they think are infringing copyright
  • avoid threatening action unless legal advice has been taken first
 

The Rule #1

Do not insult any other member. Be polite and do business. Thank you!

Premium Members

Latest Comments

New Threads

Domain Forum Friends

Our Mods' Businesses

*the exceptional businesses of our esteemed moderators
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
      There are no messages in the current room.
      Top Bottom