Considerations for Innocent Domain Name Owners
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by Lee Hodgson August 15, 2003
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The
ICANN Uniform
Dispute Resolution Policy ("UDRP") and the Anticybersquatting
Consumer Protection Act ("ACPA") present grave risks to
innocent domain name owners. This page offers some general comments for
domain name owners to assist them in avoiding loss of their domain names.
Who is this page
for?
This page is for innocent domain name owners. If you own numerous domain
names matching coined or unique trademarks of other companies, then this
page is not for you; don't bother to read further.
Get
a trademark registration. To minimize the risk of loss of
your domain name, your first step should be to obtain a trademark registration
matching your domain name. In most countries you may do this yourself
and are not required by law to employ a trademark firm. If loss of your
domain name would cause you great harm, however, then I recommend you
consult competent trademark counsel in your country and obtain a trademark
registration. There have been many, many sad cases where innocent domain
name owners lost their domain names to covetous parties through UDRP actions
and court actions, and in every such case of which we are aware, the domain
name owner had failed to obtain a trademark registration. Conversely,
we are unaware of even a single case in which a domain name owner who
has obtained a trademark registration has subsequently lost the domain
name through UDRP or court action.
In the United
States, the law does not require you to use a trademark firm. You can
do it yourself if you wish. See "Can
I register a trademark myself?"
Keep your Whois
information current.
There are cases where a court or UDRP tribunal ruling against a domain
name owner based its decision in part on incomplete or out-of-date Whois
information. It is thus clear that you should keep your Whois information
up to date.
Check your Whois
and DNS information frequently.
There are well-publicized cases where covetous parties have obtained domain
names simply by submitting forged papers or emails to the domain name
registrar. Often the theft is accomplished in a stepwise fashion, first
changing your nameserver information with the registrar, waiting a while
to see if you don't notice that, and changing the rest of the Whois record
later. You should check your Whois and DNS information frequently. Commercial
services are available which will check these things for you, but even
if you use such a service you should check the information yourself from
time to time.
Make sure to pay
your registration fees.
It is commonplace to read of cases where domain name owners (even large,
well-known companies) fail to pay their registration fees and then lose
their domain names. If your Whois information is out of date, your registration
fee invoice may never reach you. You should check the due dates for your
annual fees and mark those dates on a calendar so that if the invoice
doesn't reach you, you can pay the fee anyway.
What to do if
you receive a cease-and-desist letter from a law firm representing a coverous
party.
If you receive a cease-and-desist letter, do
not respond yourself. In nearly all of the sad cases where
an innocent domain name owner lost his or her domain name, the domain
name owner responded himself or herself, and said things which later worked
to the advantage of the covetous party. Particular blunders include:
Offering to
sell the domain name, or stating that it is for sale. There
are dozens of cases where a UDRP tribunal or court based its decision
to take away a domain name and give it to the covetous party, because
the domain name owner offered to sell the domain name or said it was
for sale. Under the ACPA, the mere act of offering to sell the domain
name supposedly counts as proof that the domain name owner is breaking
the law. Do not offer to sell your domain name except upon advice of
experienced trademark counsel.
Responding
to an offer to purchase the domain name.
The covetous party, well aware of the ACPA language that offering to
sell a domain name owner supposedly proves the domain name owner is
breaking the law, will quite often offer to by the domain name, and
then if the domain name owner responds in any way, the response is urged
to the Court as proving that the domain name owner is a lawbreaker.
Do not respond to an offer to purchase your domain name except upon
advice of experienced trademark counsel.
Responding
other than through counsel. If you are an innocent domain
name owner and if you respond through competent counsel who are experienced
with domain name cases, the odds are that the covetous party will leave
you alone thereafter. In our firm's experience, in the majority of cases
where we respond to the covetous party (rather than the domain name
owner responding pro se) on behalf of an innocent domain name owner,
the covetous party is never heard from again. In contrast, if a domain
name owner responds pro se, this often seems to embolden the covetous
party who then attempts to use court action or a UDRP complaint to try
to panic the domain name owner into handing over the domain name.
Appealing to
the law firm's innate sense of fairness to innocent parties.
You can figure out for yourself why this is unlikely to work.
Presenting
to the lawyer a list of other parties who use the same mark or similar
domain names.
This is somewhat like the previous point. What's really going on is
that the covetous party wants your
domain
name, not someone else's domain name. As such, you will
probably not get anywhere asking the other side to be reasonable and
look at your long list of domain names that also contain the trademark
of interest. (In contrast, if competent trademark counsel presents a
list of others who hold identical trademark registrations, it may well
be one of several factors prompting the covetous party to back down
in its demands.)
There is
yet another, quite important, reason why you should respond through counsel
and not pro se, and that is that if you respond yourself, and if you mishandle
the case, it will be difficult or impossible to get competent counsel
to handle the case thereafter (e.g. during the UDRP proceeding or court
case).
What to do if
someone contacts you about your domain name.
The answers here are basically the same as the answers stated above in
connection with cease-and-desist letters. The reason is simple -- most
seemingly harmless contacts from covetous parties are in fact drafted
by lawyers, even though the inquiry is not on the letterhead of a law
firm. No matter how friendly or folksy a letter may be from someone asking
about your domain name, any response by you that makes any of the blunders
mentioned above (offering to sell your domain name, stating that it is
for sale, responding to an offer to purchase your domain name, etc.) is
likely to be swiftly followed by a lawsuit or UDRP complaint taking advantage
of your blunder.
What to do if
you receive a UDRP complaint.
If you receive a UDRP complaint, then time is of the essence. You will
have only a few days to prepare a response. The worst thing to do is to
fail to respond (or to fail to respond timely); the majority of UDRP decisions
against domain name owners are "default" decisions where the
domain name owner failed to respond.
You should
probably respond through counsel. The statistics are rather stark -- most
of the cases where a domain name owner responded to a UDRP complaint but
lost were cases where the domain name owner responded pro se rather than
through counsel. Similarly, nearly all of the cases where a domain name
owner responded to a UDRP complaint and prevailed were cases where the
domain name owner responded through counsel.
There is
yet another important reason why you should probably respond through counsel,
a reason which may be appreciated by reading the section that follows.
As described there, if you lose the UDRP case, you will probably be unable
to find competent counsel who are experienced with domain name cases to
represent you in the subsequent court challenge. On the other hand, if
you are represented by competent counsel who are experienced with domain
name cases in the UDRP case, then in the (hopefully unlikely) event that
the UDRP panel rules against you, you will already have counsel retained
and familiar with your case who can promptly get the court case going
to block the UDRP result.
You (that
is, your counsel) should probably ask for a three-person panel. The UDRP
rules provide for one-person panels and three-person panels. Most of the
"howler" UDRP decisions, where the decision was completely erroneous
and showed ignorance of the law of trademarks, were from one-person panels.
Your best chance of avoiding a "howler" result is to ask for
(and pay for) a three-person panel.
Finding competent
counsel who are experienced with domain name cases.
Whenever a new area of law develops, such as domain name dispute law,
lawyers who previously did not have enough work to do tend to trip over
each other in efforts to attract work in the new area. In contrast, the
lawyers and law firms with meaningful experience in domain name disputes
tend to be busy and have no need to try to attract more work. It is thus
rather a challenge for an innocent domain name owner to select competent
counsel among the candidates who present themselves.
One approach,
probably the best approach, is to get referrals from happy clients. Find
some innocent domain name owners who have been in disputes and get their
advice about counsel.
Asking
to have settlement discussions excluded from evidence. The
innocent domain name owner who is the target of a UDRP action, and who
previously engaged in settlement discussions with the covetous party,
will probably want to consider asking the UDRP panel to exclude such discussions
from evidence. Such exclusion happened, for example, in the lifeplan.com
case.
Asking for a finding
of reverse domain name hijacking.
The innocent domain name owner who is the target of a UDRP action should
consider asking the UDRP panel to make a finding of reverse domain name
hijacking. There are several cases in which UDRP panels have made such
findings, among them the qtrade.com
case, the k2r.com
case, the smartdesign.com
case, and the safaricasino.com
case.
What to do if
you lose a UDRP case.
If you lose a UDRP case in which you appeared pro se, that is, without
benefit of counsel, then you face an uphill struggle. You have only ten
days in which to do all the steps required to challenge the UDRP result
in court. These steps include identifying candidates for litigation counsel,
contacting them, asking them to do conflict checks, selecting litigation
counsel, paying a substantial advance of funds to litigation counsel;
selecting a court in which to file the complaint, identifying candidates
for local counsel in that court, contacting them, asking them to do conflict
checks, selecting local counsel, and paying a substantial advance of funds
to local counsel. During these ten days you must also draft your court
papers, get them filed, and get court-stamped copies of the papers into
the hands of ICANN.
Most competent
counsel who are experienced with domain name cases will decline to get
involved in such a case. The reasons are simple: (a) the UDRP case may
have been mishandled, making it nearly impossible to win a later court
case; and (b) ten days is really too short a time to get everything done
that must be done. There is not enough time to do a good job.
What to do
if you are sued. Some covetous parties who seek domain names owned by
innocent domain name owners will choose to use court litigation rather
than a UDRP proceeding. The reason is simple -- if the domain name owner
is innocent, then the UDRP panel may well rule in favor of the domain
name owner, and it won't cost the domain name owner much money to prevail.
In such a case, then, the covetous party may sell choose to go to court
in the hopes that the cost of litigation (much higher than the cost of
a UDRP proceeding) will induce the innocent domain name owner to give
up and hand over the domain name.
The worst
thing to do in such a case is to do nothing. If you fail to answer timely,
the court will enter a default judgment against you.
If you are
sued, you should consult competent counsel who are experienced with domain
name cases. Competent counsel may be able to find steps which may be taken
in your case to improve your bargaining power and your prospects of getting
the case decided in your favor or thrown out. Such counsel may, for example,
use Federal Rule of Evidence 408 to try to have settlement discussions
excluded from the case.
As mentioned
above, finding competent counsel who are experienced in domain name matters
to represent you in a UDRP case is quite difficult. It is even more difficult
in a court case, because the lawyer needs to know that he or she will
be paid from now until the end of the case. Once a lawyer appears on behalf
of a client in court, it is often very difficult to get excused from a
continued obligation to represent the client to the end of the case. For
this reason, experienced counsel will typically ask for a substantial
advance of funds before taking on the case.
There are
the previously mentioned difficulties, for example that a lawyer who is
experienced in this area is probably quite busy and cannot readily take
on more cases, due to prior obligations to existing clients.
One of the
biggest problems comes if (as is usually the case) there were some sort
of communications in the time before you were sued. There may have been
a cease-and-desist letter or emails or other communications. If you responded
to those communications yourself (without benefit of counsel) then there
is a substantial risk you will have done things to weaken your case. Competent
counsel, who are probably already fully booked with other work, will not
want to take on a case where earlier mistakes were made and perhaps cannot
be overcome or undone.
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