In response to the original post on this subject: Under auDA policy there are 2 possible procedures, depending on the type of complaint that you have. 1. Registrant eligibility If you believe that the registrant is no longer eligible to hold their domain name under auDA policy rules (eg. their company has been deregistered by ASIC), then you can bring a complaint under the Complaints (Registrant Eligibility) Policy - see http://www.auda.org.au/docs/auda-2002-25.pdf 2. Cybersquatting If the registrant is eligible, but you believe that the registrant has registered the domain name in bad faith, has no legitimate rights in the name and is infringing your rights (ie. is 'cybersquatting' on the name), then you can bring a complaint under the .au Dispute Resolution Policy - see http://www.auda.org.au/policy/audrp There may also be possible actions under Australian law, such as passing off or trade mark infringement, but this falls outside auDA policy and you should seek legal advice. Regards Jo Lim Chief Policy Officer .au Domain Administration Ltd (auDA) ph 03 9349 4711 mob 0410 553 233 Join the auDA Announcements list http://www.auda.org.au/list/announceReceived on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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