I paid £3300 to buy my surname .co.uk on the secondary market, to use as my primary business name. I paid that much to secure the most recognised, most trusted, most respected .uk extension available. I thought it a fair price to pay, as a one off expense.
As a popular surname, there were several existing trademarks for the exact surname. I didn't bother registering my own trademark as my planned use for the domain was very niche, and it was easy enough for me work around existing trademarks. I'd acquire rights through use, in my chosen niche.
As I already owned the premier .uk extension, I wasn't concerned about someone else coming along and registering the .whatever, and developing a site. In my mind, I had the only extension that mattered – the .com was already a very established site, operating in an entirely different area.
Now, if Nominet's proposals go ahead unchanged. I will have zero chance of securing the .uk of my surname as it will go to one of TM holders. I do not consider that fair in the slightest. One of those existing trademark holders could have easily purchased the .co.uk domain from the previous registrant or attempted to win via DRS, but they didn't – it was me who stumped up the cash, and it is me who has paid the renewal fees to Nominet ever since.
The above story is my story, but by no means unique. If this proposal goes ahead, tens of thousands of users will find themselves in a similar situation, potentially much worse.
Note: I do buy and sell domains, as well as being an end user for some. The point is that this isn't just a disaster in the making for 'domainers', it is a disaster in the making for thousands of normal businesses.
- Rob