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| What the ACPA Covers
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Under the ACPA, a person may face civil liability to the owner of a trademark (or a personal name) if such person:
(i) has a bad faith intent to profit from a mark; and
(ii) registers, trafficks in, or uses a domain name that:
(a) is identical or confusingly similar to a distinctive trademark;
(b) is identical, confusingly similar to or dilutive of a famous trademark; or
(c) infringes a specially-granted trademark such as "U.S. OLYMPICS" or "AMERICAN RED CROSS."
See the entire text of Section 43(d)
A "distinctive trademark" is any trademark that has been registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office or which has been used with goods and/or services for sufficient time that it has acquired "secondary meaning" among consumers.
A "famous trademark" is one that a court says is famous. There are numerous factors that are considered, including the duration and extent of use, extent of advertising, degree of public recognition, and whether the mark was registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. In practice, a "famous trademark" is one that most people have heard of, on a regular basis, for many years (i.e. Kodak, Exxon, Microsoft).
The important thing to realize about the ACPA is that it distinguishes between a "distinctive" mark and a "famous" mark.
Liability is imposed with respect to a "distinctive" mark if the domain name is "identical
or confusingly similar." However, liability may be imposed with respect to a
"famous" mark even if the domain name is merely "dilutive" of
that mark. It is the notion of "dilution" that creates the largest pitfall for domain name resellers.
The term "dilution" means the lessening of the capacity of the famous mark to identify and distinguish goods or services, regardless of whether there is actual competition between the trademark owner and the accused diluter, and regardless of whether the public is likely to be confused or deceived. Thus, McDonalds Corp. could sue the owner of www.McDonaldsBakery.com under the theory of dilution. Likewise, Disney could sue the owner of www.DisneyStinks.com under the same theory. It seems unfair, but that is the law.
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| Who May Be Liable Under the ACPA?
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Only a person who has a bad faith intent to profit from a mark may be held liable under the ACPA. In assessing the "bad faith" of a person who had registered another person's trademark as a domain name, courts will consider whether the person:
1. has any trademark or other rights in the domain name;
2. has a legal or commonly-used name matching the domain name;
3. has used the domain name for bona fide offers of goods or services;
4. is making "fair use" of the mark in a site using the domain name;
5. intended to divert customers to a site that could harm the trademark's goodwill;
6. offered to sell the domain name without having used it;
7. provided material false contact information in his domain name application;
8. registered or acquired multiple domain names that he knows are identical or confusingly similar to already distinctive or famous marks.
In general, domain name resellers who maintain a large stock of unused domain names, which they offer for sale to others, will be deemed to have "bad faith" under the ACPA if one or more of the names infringes another person's trademark. In contrast, a domain name owner who registers and uses a confusingly similar or dilutive mark for bona fide or "fair use" purposes, and who does not offer the name for sale, will probably not be deemed to have "bad faith."
"Fair use" of a trademark is a use for descriptive purposes, political commentary, parody, and other legally-recognized activities. There are no hard and fast rules in this area of law, so if you intend to knowingly make "fair use" of another's trademark, you should consult a trademark attorney.
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| Damages
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Under the ACPA, trademark owners can obtain injunctive relief (i.e. a court order to forfeit, cancel or transfer the domain name), monetary damages, defendant's profits, costs, and possibly attorney's fees. The law allows the injured party to elect either actual damages (i.e. lost profits) or statutory damages of $1,000 to $100,000 per domain name.
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