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Letter from company director

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Hi,

Yesterday I had a letter from a company director who had written to me by email saying that i should take my site down within 7 days as their site is trademarked.

Their business is trade marked for for a 3 word phrase.

Mine is a two word phrase. (The phrase is similar)

I'm operating in a similar business as theirs but its very relevant to my business.

I have never offered this name for sale to this company or anyone else.

The director then offered me £££ to buy my site.

Its a .co.uk

Fun and games now begin.

What are your thoughts ?
 
Hard to know without more specifics, though the fact he offered to buy it maybe suggests he's not sure where he stands either.
 
Hard to know without more specifics, though the fact he offered to buy it maybe suggests he's not sure where he stands either.

Yes i thought that. A single panelist will cost approx £1,100 , 3 panelists is approx £3,000

If claimant wants a single or three panel he pays for the costs including legal fees.

So i guess they don't want to pay the legal fees as it would probably cost them at the minimum £2,500
 
are they generic words in their own right? or only generic and tied to the market segment because of the other business?

You could say "acorn" + "domains" are generic words but I could claim they only go together in the domain world due to my activities.

Admin
 
PM the domains and will provide guidance.

DRS is £750 plus VAT, time and legal fees (if you respond, £200 if not).
 
please do not take this as sound or solid legal advice, but everything you have said suggests that this company director has got it into his head that a scare tactic will make the sound of just buying the domain off you seem sweeter and a relief.

if it's a generic phrase and you are in competition, not cashing in or trying to build on their name, that's the end of that.
 
When was your domain registered and when was theirs registered?
That's the question, but also:

Which of the two starting trading first ?

Reasoning: the second comer should have known about the possible competitors, and refrained from using a name that could be construed as confusingly similar.
 
That's the question, but also:

Which of the two starting trading first ?

Reasoning: the second comer should have known about the possible competitors, and refrained from using a name that could be construed as confusingly similar.

Their domain name is different from my domain name left of the dot.
 
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