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Protecting Your Domain Name: Understanding The Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Prot
Protecting Your Domain Name: Understanding The Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Prot
Protecting Your Domain Name: Understanding The
Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act by
Despite the simple functionality on many levels of a domain name,
it is vital to the success of an online business enterprise. At its
heart, a domain name essentially is an address that tells a user of
the Internet how to find a particular website. In many instances,
the owners of trade or service marks use their marks as part of
their business domain names. Nonetheless, there are many instances
in which someone else may take advantage and start using the trade
or service mark as part of another domain name. With this well in
mind, it is incumbent upon trade and service mark owners to monitor
to make certain that others are not misusing their intellectual
property in the registration of other domain names.
No matter how the domain name usage actually is discovered, trade
or service mark owners have two basic options for resolving
disputes over domain names. First, a person or company can take
action under the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Policy. The benefits
of this process is that it is relatively fast and relative
inexpensive. There are drawbacks that include the fact that this
process is not available to all domain names, it is not appropriate
for license disputes and damages and attorney fees cannot be
recovered through this process.
The other alternative available to a person or company who believes
it has been wronged or violated in terms of a domain name related
issue is the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act ("ACPA").
The ACPA was enacted in 1999 and was designed to prevent
cybersquatting on the Internet.
Cybersquatting generally is considered the use of domain names that
are confusingly similar to trademarks and service marks owned by
other business enterprises or individuals.
The ACPA can impose liability on the registrant of such a domain
name (or its licensee) if that person or entity has done the
following:
(i)has a bad faith intent to profit from the mark; and,
(ii)registers, traffics in, or uses a domain name that is identical
or confusingly similar to the mark and the mark (or dilutive if the
mark is famous) was distinctive (or famous) at the time of the
domain name registration.
The ACPA does establish a set of nine nonexclusive factors that a
court may utilize in working to determining whether a person or
entity has acted in bad faith, has a bad intent, in regard to a
domain name registration. The ACPA states that "Bad faith intent .
. . shall not be found in any case in which the court determines
that the person believed and had reasonable grounds to believe that
the use of the domain name was a fair use or otherwise lawful."
For example, the actual trade or service mark owner must
demonstrate that the challenged domain name is confusingly similar
to its own trade or service mark. Only the challenged domain name
and the trade or service mark will be compared under the ACPA.
According to the ACPA, the proper inquiry is whether the
defendant's domain name is so similar to the plaintiff's trade or
service mark that the two could be confused by a third party.
If the mark owner is successful in the action, the court may order
the forfeiture, cancellation or transfer of the domain name.
Moreover, the mark owner may recover the defendant's profits, any
damages sustained by the owner of the trademark and its costs of
the action.
Pursuant to the statute, the owner of the mark may elect to recover
statutory damages, in lieu of actual damages and profits. The court
can award statutory damages in an amount between $1,000 and
$100,000 per domain name.
Claims that are made under the ACPA and UDRP are two options
available to trade and service mark owners who are trying to
protect their mark from being used by others in bad faith.
Robert Masud, Esq. is the principal of Masud & Company LLC, a
law firm for the world of
business, finance and the internet. Find out how our lawyers
can help you at http://www.masudco.com.
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