Trademark applications are insufficient to establish trademark rights under the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP), and a failure to provide relevant evidence of trademark usage is fatal to proving common law trademark rights under the policy. Those are two very basic but important reminders in a short but helpful UDRP decision that was just recently published.
These gTLDs Appear in Most UDRP Disputes (2021)
Cybersquatters Sell Prescription Eye Drops (No Prescription Required)
Domain Dispute Digest (Q4 2021): Record-Breaking Numbers
Cybersquatters in the Metaverse
When Facebook embraced the metaverse by rebranding its corporate name to Meta in October 2021, it did much more than acknowledge its own place in this emerging experience for social and business communities. It also opened the door to other companies and individuals interested in jumping on the bandwagon – including, of course, cybersquatters, who are nothing if not opportunistic.
Domain Dispute Interview: Inside the ADNDRC
In this episode of my ongoing series of video interviews with domain name dispute service providers, I talk with Kiran Sanghera, secretary general of the Asian Domain Name Dispute Resolution Centre (ADNDRC) and special counsel for the Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre (HKIAC); and Tom Leung, an ADR case manager for HKIAC.
More Big Law Firms Targeted by Cybersquatters
Record-Setting Year for Domain Name Disputes
Trademark Timing and Bad Faith Under the UDRP
In this UDRP case study video, I explain how the owner of a trademark registration for PTP lost a dispute over the domain name <ptp.com>. As I discuss, the issue in this case raises one of the most common misconceptions I hear about domain name disputes: that a company can file – and win – a complaint under the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP) against anyone who simply has a domain name that is identical to its trademark.
Ruh-Roh: Warner Bros. Loses Scooby-Doo URS Domain Name Dispute
In this domain name dispute case study video, I explain how Warner Bros. lost a decision under the Uniform Rapid Suspension System (URS) for the domain name <scoobnb-doo.xyz>, even though it was used in connection with a cryptocurrency website that included images of the Scooby-Doo cartoon character. The decision is an important reminder about the challenges in filing and winning URS decisions, even for sophisticated trademark owners.






