This is a post written by contributor, Paul Raynor Keating. Mr. Keating is a California licensed attorney who has lived and worked in Barcelona and most recently London. He is a respected lawyer that represents domain investors, registrars and domain-related service providers. In this post, Mr. Keating discusses the recent controversial UDRP decision involving ceat.com.
In the blink of an eye – the ever changing world of the UDRP What does Ceat.com (D2011-1981) teach us?
I will not bore you with the history of the UDRP or that it was intended only to address cases of clear cybersquatting. Such is left to the annals of history largely ignored by panelists who continue, IMO, to write decisions by searching for reasons to achieve their desired results. With the breadth of UDRP case precedent it would take a very stupid monkey to not be able to find a case to support just about any position – including one stating that the Earth is indeed flat as we all know. Ceat.com is a case in which the panelists went out of their way to fit the preverbal square peg in the round hole.
My focus here is in the subtle change in what constitutes “legitimate interest”, an issue which has been rearing its ugly head in several recent UDRP decisions such as Autoownersinsurance.com and Ceat.com.
Let’s set the stage. In Ceat.com, the Complainant, an Indian company, held a trademark for tires. It had received the trademark by assignment in 2010 from as third party. The respondent registered the domain in 2001. During the course of registration the domain was used in PPC for various purposes, none of which seemed to focus on the Complainant or its products. We will ignore the issues of “Willful blindness” – which says that one ignores looking at what one knows to exist and not that one should explore what is unkown. We will ignore that complainant’s evidence of fame were all attributed to the domains post-registration period. We will also ignore that complainant was in India and respondent was in Barbados.
The Policy addresses legitimate interest by way of non-exclusive example. The Policy provides several examples and the language makes clear that the examples are non-exclusive – meaning it can be established in any other appropriate manner fitting the facts. Each example is a defenses. (Policy ¶4(c)). In other words, legitimate interest is proven through any available means and it is for the complaint to prove that no legitimate interest exists.
Although the Policy requires that a complainant prove that “(ii) you have no rights or legitimate interests in respect of the domain name;” these words seem to have taken on an ever-restrictive significance for registrants.
Prior UDRP decisions have held that the question posed by Policy 4(a)(ii) is whether the Respondent has any right or legitimate interest in the Domain Name. Respondent must prevail if it has established a “potentially legitimate interest in the disputed domain name and Complainant has been unable to prove that such interest is illegitimate.” (Borges, S.A., Tanio, S.A.U. v. James English, D2007- 0477 (WIPO 2007)). Respondent need only show “a plausible, non-infringing explanation for selecting the disputed domain name.” (Telephone and Data Systems, Inc. v. Protected Domain Services / Daniel Wang, D2011-0435 (WIPO 2011); emphasis in original – Citing, Choice Courier Systems, Inc. v. William H. Kirkendale, D2002-0483 (WIPO 2002) and Webvan Group, Inc. v. Stan Atwood, D2000-1512 (WIPO 2001).
A balancing of which party has a “better” right is not authorized under the UDRP. (Telephone and Data Systems, Inc. v. Protected Domain Services / Daniel Wang, D2011-0435 (WIPO 2011); Choice Courier Systems, Inc. v. William H. Kirkendale, D2002-0483 (WIPO 2002); Dial-A-Mattress Operating Corp. v Ultimate Search, D2001-0764 (WIPO 2001)) .
Complainant has the burden of proving that Respondent has no legitimate interest in the Domain Name, not of convincing the Panel that Complainant has more of an interest than Respondent in the Domain Name. (Telephone and Data Systems, Inc. v. Protected Domain Services / Daniel Wang, D2011-0435 (WIPO 2011); emphasis in original).
These decisions support the conclusion that a complaint must show that the Respondent has NO rights or legitimate interests in the domain. In other words, if the complainant fails to show a lack of legitimate interest, respondent should prevail.
The correct approach then is to view the Respondent’s use divorced from any trademark claim. The question is whether Respondent has ‘a’ legitimate interest. This is viewed entirely by the nature of the domain name, its composite words and the manner in which the domain name is used.
The analysis is limited to:
- Does the domain name have significance aside from the asserted trademark?
- Does the domain name exist merely to benefit from the trademark?
- But for the trademark do the PPC links bear relationship to the Domain Name?
The truth of the above is seen in the example. If I were to approach the 2nd Element with the complainant’s mark in mind, I would view the use only through those eyes. I would judge legitimate interest only based upon the trademark and not the actual use. In other words, if I am looking for red cars I will see a predominance of red cars. Such is human nature. However, the 2nd Element asks us to divorce ourselves from the asserted trademark and to look only at the use and determine whether that use legitimate, aside from the presence of a trademark. The Policy demands that we answer the questions: Does it have any bonafide use other than in connection with the asserted trademark?
Ceat.com is an example of twisting the language of the Policy.
Many prior decisions have dealt with PPC usage. In general the best defense to a UDRP claim is that the domain has been used consistently in its descriptive sense. While prior decisions (including those cited by the majority) found that descriptive domains used for descriptive PPC pages was a legitimate use, those decisions were issued in response to defenses based upon descriptive use.
In Ceat.com, the panel expanded the rule by holding that PPC use is not legitimate unless the PPC pages reflect descriptive use of the domain name; meaning that unless the PPC results are descriptively related to the words comprising the domain your use is illegitimate. This turns the precedent on its head and is a significant change of the Policy.
Such a proposition acts to limit legitimate interest – otherwise unlimited by the Policy. More importantly, the panel decision forecloses PPC uses as legitimate unless the PPC results are descriptive.
The respondent in Ceat.com provided numerous examples of non-infringing use of “CEAT” including other trademarks and acronyms adopted by third parties. The PPC webpage was generic and did not target “tires”. As of the date of this article, the 2-click lander showed:
Related Searches |
While none of the above links bring the phrase “CEAT” to mind, the simple absence of a logical link does not render the use illegitimate. In reality, the absence of a link to the complainant or “tires” should be telling.
The panel concluded that because there was no dictionary definition, the primary significance to the registrant must have been the trademark.
There is no dictionary meaning for the term “ceat.” The value of the disputed domain name to the Respondent is, therefore, its value as a trademark referring to Complainant and to the several other organizations identified by the Respondent who also use the letters “CEAT” as their marks.
The above ignores the premise that the legitimate interest may in fact be “whatever the user intends to find”. Such use does not envision targeting the complainant and the use of a common word. The use of a word or phrase in a non-trademark sense is simply not within the ambit of the UDRP. The issue is not whether the domain is used descriptively; it is whether it is used to target the complainant or its marks. That is the entire point of the UDRP.
The above language establishes the presumption that “if the domain is not used descriptively it must be used to unfairly detract from the complainant’s trademark”. This was the conclusion of the Panel in AutoOwnersInsurance.com NAF 1423534. Such a proposition is not only unsupported by the Policy, it displays ignorance as to the workings of the Internet. Aside from the fact that PPC pages are not displayed in search engines, it presupposes what Internet users are looking for when they type a word that happens to be a trademark of a complainant. I know that the complainant in this case provided no evidence as to user intent. Absent such evidence (not bald allegations mind you) this is prejudice in favor of the complainant.
So is any of this surprising? No. Panelists are largely legal counsel for trademark holders. This is a fault of the UDRP system and its providers as a whole. The result, however, is that as representatives of trademark interests, they see everything through the eye of a trademark holder. The results although disappointing, should not be surprising. Unless the panelist has litigated a tough trademark claim in favor of a defendant they have no idea that life exists outside of the trademark context because that is how they have been trained to see the world. It is sort of like not seeing “theknot.com” illegitimate because the panelist failed to see the context between “the knot” and marriage.
Panelists’ aside, one issue is with the structure of the UDRP itself. To prevail, a complainant must prove all three elements. Having sat in many a panel presentation I can tell you they are fearful of “expanding” legitimate interest for the simple reason that the UDRP is an all-or-nothing proposition for the complainant. This is not a bad thing given the original intent of the Policy.
In closing I am reminded of the words of Ron Coleman who said of domain and trademarks in general:
And thus trademark’s girth continues to bloat. The rich get richer, the range of possibility for both free commerce and expression contracts — and the “brand equity” in society of the law and those that interpret it sinks like a stone.
IMO, the dissent – by Neil Brown – got it right and Mr. Bernstein should re-think his approach.
[T]he right to register such acronyms cannot be unlimited. Knowing of a complainant’s trademark, registering a domain name to copy the trademark or using it to trade off it or to target the trademark owner or act inappropriately towards it must put the registrant in a different position and put at risk its claim to have a right or legitimate interest in the domain name. But in the absence of such factors, the registrant has as much right as anyone else to use expressions such as acronyms, generic, dictionary words or other domain names made up from a small number of letters.
Panelists may argue that if the UDRP is interpreted broadly in favor of respondents then cybersquatting will grow. My answer is that While the Policy is not the best example of draftsmanship, is what we have to work with and we do ourselves a disservice to ignore what is written in favor of what we wish had been. We cannot rewrite history so that the white guys always win. Panelists must step back occasionally and ADR providers should ensure that panelists are drawn from a more diverse background.