Comments on a couple of different postings: > Under common law they can't trade under that > name since my clients own the business name. Your clients may own the business & company names "Gold Coast Homes", but given current practice, someone else could use "Smith's Gold Coast Homes" or "Gold Coast Homes Experts" or a similar variation. It appears to be common practice for the Business Names folks to accept the addition of a single word - especially the addition of a person's name - as a difference substantive enough to get a new Business Name issued that is in other respects similar to an existing one. > the domain name matched a 'brand name' of his company's, although I was under > the impression that brand names must be registered with the government. No, brands don't have to be registered with the government. Note that these issues are an inevitable consequence of the decision to include "close and substantial connection" as an eligibility criteria for domain names in .au. Since: a) "close and substantial connection" has no objective definition b) the "close and substantial connection" criteria specifically includes products and services - e.g. brands c) a common occurrence in product / service brand development is that brand development before actual launch can be lengthy in time, and done in secret Then its generally impractical to challenge someone's eligibility for a .au domain name (assuming its not a bad faith / passing off situation). The domain name holder can retreat behind the "its a new brand currently under development - the details are commercial in confidence". > The people who own the domain are using it. > It is goldcoasthomes.com.au. > Their business is called Dytor and Yates Real Estate. For example, applying the "close and substantial connection" criteria to the domain name goldcoasthomes.com.au...........the com.au policy says: c) be otherwise closely and substantially connected to the registrant, because the domain name refers to: (i) a product that the registrant manufactures or sells; or (ii) a service that the registrant provides; So y'all can ask yourselves the question.....are gold coast homes a product or service that Dytor and Yates Real Estate sells / provides? Hell yes! Gold coast homes are EXACTLY the product / service that Dytor and Yates Real Estate sells / provides. So according to the existing policy for com.au, developed by the advisory panel and listed on the auDA web site, then Dytor and Yates Real Estate is eligible for the domain name goldcoasthomes.com.au. When you think about it for a minute or two, you realise that probably >98% of domain names in use represent / are clearly related to a product or service that the registrant provides (otherwise the Registrant would have little interest in that domain name). So forget about the "company name / business name" criteria - the "close and substantial connection" clause covers almost all .au domain names. All of this was inevitable once the "close and substantial" clause was accepted as an eligibility criteria in the .au namespace. Regards, Mark.Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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