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Policy
Adopted: August 26, 1999
Implementation Documents Approved: October 24, 1999 |

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Note:
This policy is now in effect. See www.icann.org/udrp/udrp-schedule.htm
for the implementation schedule.
1. Purpose.
This Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (the
"Policy") has been adopted by the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ("ICANN"),
is incorporated by reference into your Registration Agreement,
and sets forth the terms and conditions in connection with a
dispute between you and any party other than us (the
registrar) over the registration and use of an Internet domain
name registered by you. Proceedings under Paragraph
4 of this Policy will be conducted according to the Rules
for Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (the
"Rules of Procedure"), which are available at www.icann.org/udrp/udrp-rules-24oct99.htm,
and the selected administrative-dispute-resolution service
provider's supplemental rules.
2. Your Representations. By applying to register a
domain name, or by asking us to maintain or renew a domain
name registration, you hereby represent and warrant to us that
(a) the statements that you made in your Registration
Agreement are complete and
accurate; (b) to your knowledge, the registration of the
domain name will not infringe upon or otherwise violate the
rights of any third party; (c) you are not registering the
domain name for an unlawful purpose; and (d) you will not
knowingly use the domain name in violation of any applicable
laws or regulations. It is your responsibility to determine
whether your domain name registration infringes or violates
someone else's rights.
3. Cancellations, Transfers, and Changes. We will
cancel, transfer or otherwise make changes to domain name
registrations under the following circumstances:
a. subject to the provisions of Paragraph 8,
our receipt of written or appropriate electronic
instructions from you or your authorized agent to take such
action;
b. our receipt of an order from a court or arbitral
tribunal, in each case of competent jurisdiction, requiring
such action; and/or
c. our receipt of a decision of an Administrative Panel
requiring such action in any administrative proceeding to
which you were a party and which was conducted under this
Policy or a later version of this Policy adopted by ICANN.
(See Paragraph 4(i) and (k)
below.)
We may
also cancel, transfer or otherwise make changes to a domain
name registration in accordance with the terms of your
Registration Agreement or other legal requirements.
4. Mandatory
Administrative Proceeding.
This
Paragraph sets forth the type of disputes for which you are
required to submit to a mandatory administrative proceeding.
These proceedings will be conducted before one of the
administrative-dispute-resolution service providers listed at www.icann.org/udrp/approved-providers.htm
(each, a "Provider").
a.
Applicable Disputes. You are required to submit to a
mandatory administrative proceeding in the event that a
third party (a "complainant") asserts to the
applicable Provider, in compliance with the Rules of
Procedure, that
(i)
your domain name is identical or confusingly similar to a
trademark or service mark in which the complainant has
rights; and
(ii)
you have no rights or legitimate interests in respect of
the domain name; and
(iii)
your domain name has been registered and is being used in
bad faith.
In the
administrative proceeding, the complainant must prove that
each of these three elements are present.
b.
Evidence of Registration and Use in Bad Faith. For the
purposes of Paragraph 4(a)(iii), the
following circumstances, in particular but without
limitation, if found by the Panel to be present, shall be
evidence of the registration and use of a domain name in bad
faith:
(i)
circumstances indicating that you have registered or you
have acquired the domain name primarily for the purpose of
selling, renting, or otherwise transferring the domain
name registration to the complainant who is the owner of
the trademark or service mark or to a competitor of that
complainant, for valuable consideration in excess of your
documented out-of-pocket costs directly related to the
domain name; or
(ii)
you have registered the domain name in order to prevent
the owner of the trademark or service mark from reflecting
the mark in a corresponding domain name, provided that you
have engaged in a pattern of such conduct; or
(iii)
you have registered the domain name primarily for the
purpose of disrupting the business of a competitor; or
(iv)
by using the domain name, you have intentionally attempted
to attract, for commercial gain, Internet users to your
web site or other on-line location, by creating a
likelihood of confusion with the complainant's mark as to
the source, sponsorship, affiliation, or endorsement of
your web site or location or of a product or service on
your web site or location.
c.
How to Demonstrate Your Rights to and Legitimate Interests
in the Domain Name in Responding to a Complaint. When
you receive a complaint, you should refer to Paragraph
5 of the Rules of Procedure in determining how your
response should be prepared. Any of the following
circumstances, in particular but without limitation, if
found by the Panel to be proved based on its evaluation of
all evidence presented, shall demonstrate your rights or
legitimate interests to the domain name for purposes of Paragraph
4(a)(ii):
(i)
before any notice to you of the dispute, your use of, or
demonstrable preparations to use, the domain name or a
name corresponding to the domain name in connection with a
bona fide offering of goods or services; or
(ii)
you (as an individual, business, or other organization)
have been commonly known by the domain name, even if you
have acquired no trademark or service mark rights; or
(iii)
you are making a legitimate noncommercial or fair use of
the domain name, without intent for commercial gain to
misleadingly divert consumers or to tarnish the trademark
or service mark at issue.
d.
Selection of Provider. The complainant shall select the
Provider from among those approved by ICANN by submitting
the complaint to that Provider. The selected Provider will
administer the proceeding, except in cases of consolidation
as described in Paragraph 4(f).
e.
Initiation of Proceeding and Process and Appointment of
Administrative Panel. The Rules of Procedure state the
process for initiating and conducting a proceeding and for
appointing the panel that will decide the dispute (the
"Administrative Panel").
f.
Consolidation. In the event of multiple disputes between
you and a complainant, either you or the complainant may
petition to consolidate the disputes before a single
Administrative Panel. This petition shall be made to the
first Administrative Panel appointed to hear a pending
dispute between the parties. This Administrative Panel may
consolidate before it any or all such disputes in its sole
discretion, provided that the disputes being consolidated
are governed by this Policy or a later version of this
Policy adopted by ICANN.
g.
Fees. All fees charged by a Provider in connection with
any dispute before an Administrative Panel pursuant to this
Policy shall be paid by the complainant, except in cases
where you elect to expand the Administrative Panel from one
to three panelists as provided in Paragraph
5(b)(iv) of the Rules of Procedure, in which case all
fees will be split evenly by you and the complainant.
h.
Our Involvement in Administrative Proceedings. We do
not, and will not, participate in the administration or
conduct of any proceeding before an Administrative Panel. In
addition, we will not be liable as a result of any decisions
rendered by the Administrative Panel.
i.
Remedies. The remedies available to a complainant
pursuant to any proceeding before an Administrative Panel
shall be limited to requiring the cancellation of your
domain name or the transfer of your domain name registration
to the complainant.
j.
Notification and Publication. The Provider shall notify
us of any decision made by an Administrative Panel with
respect to a domain name you have registered with us. All
decisions under this Policy will be published in full over
the Internet, except when an Administrative Panel determines
in an exceptional case to redact portions of its decision.
k.
Availability of Court Proceedings. The mandatory
administrative proceeding requirements set forth in Paragraph
4 shall not prevent either you or the complainant from
submitting the dispute to a court of competent jurisdiction
for independent resolution before such mandatory
administrative proceeding is commenced or after such
proceeding is concluded. If an Administrative Panel decides
that your domain name registration should be canceled or
transferred, we will wait ten (10) business days (as
observed in the location of our principal office) after we
are informed by the applicable Provider of the
Administrative Panel's decision before implementing that
decision. We will then implement the decision unless we have
received from you during that ten (10) business day period
official documentation (such as a copy of a complaint,
file-stamped by the clerk of the court) that you have
commenced a lawsuit against the complainant in a
jurisdiction to which the complainant has submitted under Paragraph
3(b)(xiii) of the Rules of Procedure. (In general, that
jurisdiction is either the location of our principal office
or of your address as shown in our Whois database. See Paragraphs
1 and 3(b)(xiii)
of the Rules of Procedure for details.) If we receive such
documentation within the ten (10) business day period, we
will not implement the Administrative Panel's decision, and
we will take no further action, until we receive (i)
evidence satisfactory to us of a resolution between the
parties; (ii) evidence satisfactory to us that your lawsuit
has been dismissed or withdrawn; or (iii) a copy of an order
from such court dismissing your lawsuit or ordering that you
do not have the right to continue to use your domain name.
5. All
Other Disputes and Litigation. All other disputes
between you and any party other than us regarding your domain
name registration that are not brought pursuant to the
mandatory administrative proceeding provisions of Paragraph
4 shall be resolved between you and such other party
through any court, arbitration or other proceeding that may be
available.
6. Our
Involvement in Disputes. We will not participate in
any way in any dispute between you and any party other than us
regarding the registration and use of your domain name. You
shall not name us as a party or otherwise include us in any
such proceeding. In the event that we are named as a party in
any such proceeding, we reserve the right to raise any and all
defenses deemed appropriate, and to take any other action
necessary to defend ourselves.
7. Maintaining
the Status Quo. We will not cancel, transfer,
activate, deactivate, or otherwise change the status of any
domain name registration under this Policy except as provided
in Paragraph 3 above.
8. Transfers
During a Dispute.
a.
Transfers of a Domain Name to a New Holder. You may not
transfer your domain name registration to another holder (i)
during a pending administrative proceeding brought pursuant
to Paragraph 4 or for a period of fifteen
(15) business days (as observed in the location of our
principal place of business) after such proceeding is
concluded; or (ii) during a pending court proceeding or
arbitration commenced regarding your domain name unless the
party to whom the domain name registration is being
transferred agrees, in writing, to be bound by the decision
of the court or arbitrator. We reserve the right to cancel
any transfer of a domain name registration to another holder
that is made in violation of this subparagraph.
b.
Changing Registrars. You may not transfer your domain
name registration to another registrar during a pending
administrative proceeding brought pursuant to Paragraph
4 or for a period of fifteen (15) business days (as
observed in the location of our principal place of business)
after such proceeding is concluded. You may transfer
administration of your domain name registration to another
registrar during a pending court action or arbitration,
provided that the domain name you have registered with us
shall continue to be subject to the proceedings commenced
against you in accordance with the terms of this Policy. In
the event that you transfer a domain name registration to us
during the pendency of a court action or arbitration, such
dispute shall remain subject to the domain name dispute
policy of the registrar from which the domain name
registration was transferred.
9. Policy
Modifications. We reserve the right to modify this
Policy at any time with the permission of ICANN. We will post
our revised Policy at <URL> at least thirty (30)
calendar days before it becomes effective. Unless this Policy
has already been invoked by the submission of a complaint to a
Provider, in which event the version of the Policy in effect
at the time it was invoked will apply to you until the dispute
is over, all such changes will be binding upon you with
respect to any domain name registration dispute, whether the
dispute arose before, on or after the effective date of our
change. In the event that you object to a change in this
Policy, your sole remedy is to cancel your domain name
registration with us, provided that you will not be entitled
to a refund of any fees you paid to us. The revised Policy
will apply to you until you cancel your domain name
registration.
Page
Updated 03-January-00
(c) 2000 The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Numbers. All rights reserved.
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