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  1. #1
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    Project.me (WIPO)

    http://domainnamewire.com/2009/11/20/project-me-domain-dispute-sets-dangerous-precedent/

    ...

    In his November 13 article, Andrew Allemann reported a WIPO decision denying transfer of Project.Me (project.me GmbH v. Lin, Case No. DME2009-0008 (WIPO Nov. 11, 2009)). This article picks up where he left off.



    In Lin, an Iphone app developer who owns a German trademark registration for PROJECT ME brought a WIPO domain dispute proceeding against a domainer who registered Project.Me during the .Me landrush. The case was decided by a three-member WIPO Panel. In analyzing the first prong of the ICANN Policy governing domain disputes – whether the trademarked name and the disputed domain name are identical or confusingly similar – the Panel departed radically from well-established procedure in its decision. It compared the trademarked name with the entire domain name, including the ccTLD. Indeed, the Panel’s rationale for this radical approach was based on .Me’s own sales literature, which encouraged users to capitalize on the .Me extension with “catchy” domain names like Contact.Me, Drive.Me or Fly.Me. This rogue UDRP Panel actually went outside of the submitted written papers in analyzing the first prong of the ICANN Policy but then again there is nothing in the ICANN Policy prohibiting them from doing so. The WIPO panel qualified its new approach by stating that it could not “ignore the commercial reality that, in the .me domain name space, the ccTLD identifier is likely to be a key part of a domain name” and that “in appropriate cases [a decision may] be based on a consideration of the domain name as a whole – that is, of the domain name including the ‘.me’ suffix.” What the Panel meant by “appropriate cases” is a very broad term subject to an individual Panelist’s interpretation and is of great concern here.



    In addition, what is so disturbing about this decision is that the Panel took the completely opposite approach of how previous UDRP panels analyze the identical/confusingly similar element in a domain dispute. Even US trademark law does not consider the TLD and/or ccTLD as capable of functioning as a trademark and UDRP Panels should not either. When considering whether a trade name is capable of functioning as a trademark US trademark law looks to the “left” of the dot.



    So what does this all mean for the domainer? We all know that Domain investors spend their hard earned money on domain names and some hire trademark lawyers to perform trademark searches before buying domain names to make sure they are not going to be faced with paying their lawyer more money to defend domain disputes or trademark infringement lawsuits. The WIPO Panel in the Project.Me case has now made things much more complicated.


    This decision could open the floodgates to future UDRP panels and opportunistic trademark holders and their lawyers using the same analysis against the domainer to prove a domain name is identical or confusingly similar. Will it now be easier for a trademark holder to win a domain dispute because a domainer registered, for example, Insure.Me? I can think of numerous instances where one could find the trademarked name and the domain name to appear to be identical by including the TLD or ccTLD in the analysis. The lesson to be learned here is that after the Project.Me decision, it would be most wise before considering investing money into the next great domain to consider the meaning of it by including its TLD or ccTLD extension. I know that after reading the WIPO decision my trademark clearance search analysis has now changed. We will have to wait and see if other panelists take the same approach under similar circumstances.

  2. #2
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    the Panel departed radically from well-established procedure in its decision
    There is NO real consideration for precedent with WIPO proceedings. Years ago, one panel ruled that Realtor.BIZ was an important trademark while another panel decided that Realtors.BIZ was a trademark with such wide use that it no longer was really a trademark, for example. In both cases, the domain owner did not respond, so that wasn't the issue. In one case, the domain was given to the TM owner while in the other, the respondent kept his name. I am sure that there are tons of other similar WIPO decisions. That is why the panel selection is so important. You really need to read up on the judges if you have input into the selection which you usually do.

    I wonder how much the domainer paid for Project.Me? This was likely an auction domain as most anything (possibly) very useful was in .ME. Any refunds?? I doubt it! :(
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  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by radioz View Post
    I wonder how much the domainer paid for Project.Me?
    $3,615

    So if the owner of a trademark can claim the dot me extension as part of their trademark (because the registry promoted it that way), I wonder if someone will find a way to use the extension as a defense or a way to infringe on trademarks as well?

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  4. #4
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    great point james. I wonder if that could be used against someone if the decision is made.
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  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by DNBA View Post
    great point james. I wonder if that could be used against someone if the decision is made.

    i guess they must use it
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