Hi Petter, On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 10:20 AM, Petter Rindforth <petter.rindforth@fenixlegal.eu> wrote:
So, if the case is taken to a court (within those 10 - working - days), and the case is dismissed, the only thing the complainant has to do is to show such decision to the Registrar:
As I've noted separately, that might not be enough, especially because there might be parallel litigation relating to the domain name itself (in rem, or other creative options). The ICANN policy only contemplates **one possible scenario** as to the litigation that might be taken against a domain name in dispute during/after a UDRP. If that was the *only* litigation surrounding the fate of that domain name, then that might be the end of the story. But, it need not be. Whenever there is active litigation, registrars will tend to put a litigation hold on the domain pending the resolution of ALL active cases. If that parallel litigation survives, the registrar would hold the status quo until all active court processes are exhausted. I think folks are not thinking outside the box here, they've been perhaps mesmerized by re-reading the UDRP policy too often and thinking that it's the alpha and omega of the relevant law. It's not. There's a whole world of real law that exists outside the UDRP. Just because ICANN delineates one possible course of litigation with respect to challenging the outcome of a UDRP doesn't mean that a registrant is bound to use *only* that mechanism. ICANN has no say over any other legal mechanism(s) a registrant uses to assert their ownership claim before a relevant national court. Just like ICANN has no say over any legal mechanism(s) a non-registrant uses to dispute a domain name without resorting to use of the UDRP. Sincerely, George Kirikos 416-588-0269 http://www.leap.com/