CIRA Allows Complaint Over ecars.ca
Pursuant to CIRA’s Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy, Enterprise succeeded in its dispute against the registrant by proving, on a balance of probabilities, that: (a) “ecars.ca” and “ecar.ca” were both confusingly similar to the trade-marks in which Enterprise had rights prior to the domain name registration dates, and to which such rights still exist; (b) the domain names were registered in bad faith, since the associated web pages linked to the websites of Enterprise’s competitors, indicating the registrant intended to disrupt Enterprise’s business; and (c) there was evidence the registrant had no legitimate interest in the domain names. The registrant had submitted that the use of the pre-fix “e” was a “universal prefix of the Internet age” and using it in each of the domain names made the resulting words clearly descriptive or generic in nature, which was grounds for claiming a legitimate interest. CIRA, however, rejected the registrant’s argument since it did not consider the prefix to be descriptive in itself, and therefore such a prefix could not make words clearly descriptive or generic by association.
This entry first appeared in the February 7, 2008 edition of lawsof.com. For a copy of the CIRA decision, click here.
