Complainant is Tudor Games, Inc. of Sammamish, Washington, United States of America ("United States"), represented by Brace Point Law, United States.
Respondent is Domain Hostmaster, Customer ID No. 09382953107339 dba Whois Privacy Services Pty Ltd of Fortitude Valley, Queensland, Australia / Domain Administrator, Vertical Axis Inc. of Worthing, Christ Church, Barbados, represented by ESQwire.com Law Firm, United States.
The disputed domain name <electricfootball.com> (the "Domain Name") is registered with Fabulous.com (the "Registrar").
The Complaint was filed with the WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center (the "Center") on October 7, 2014. On October 8, 2014, the Center transmitted by e-mail to the Registrar a request for registrar verification in connection with the Domain Name. On October 9, 2014, the Registrar transmitted by e-mail to the Center its verification response disclosing registrant and contact information for the Domain Name which differed from the named Respondent and contact information in the Complaint. The Center sent an e-mail communication to Complainant on October 9, 2014, providing the registrant and contact information disclosed by the Registrar, and inviting Complainant to submit an amendment to the Complaint. Complainant filed an amendment to the Complaint on October 14, 2014.
The Center verified that the Complaint together with the amendment to the Complaint satisfied the formal requirements of the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (the "Policy" or "UDRP"), the Rules for Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (the "Rules"), and the WIPO Supplemental Rules for Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (the "Supplemental Rules").
In accordance with the Rules, paragraphs 2(a) and 4(a), the Center formally notified Respondent of the Complaint, and the proceedings commenced October 16, 2014. In accordance with the Rules, paragraph 5(a), the due date for Response November 5, 2014. The Response was filed with the Center November 5, 2014.
The Center appointed Robert A. Badgley (Chair), The Hon Neil Brown Q.C. and Angela Fox as panelists in this matter on December 10, 2014. The Panel finds that it was properly constituted. Each member of the Panel has submitted the Statement of Acceptance and Declaration of Impartiality and Independence, as required by the Center to ensure compliance with the Rules, paragraph 7.
Both parties submitted supplemental filings to the Center. In its discretion, the Panel has considered them and taken them into account in reaching its decision.
In May 1999, the United States Patent & Trademark Office ("USPTO") issued trademark registration number 2,244,553 to Michael Landsman for the word trademark ELECTRIC FOOTBALL (the "Mark"), in connection with a "football game in which playing pieces representing football players are lined up on a metal playing surface, and movement of the pieces is driven by an electric current." The first use of the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL mark in commerce was March 1949. This USPTO registration is subject to a disclaimer of any exclusive right to use the term "football" apart from the mark as shown.
In an affidavit submitted in this proceeding, Mr. Landsman states that he is the founder of Miggle Toys, Inc., and that in February 2012, he and Miggle Toys entered into two contracts with Complainant Tudor Games, Inc. Complainant was incorporated in the State of Washington, United States, in January 2012.
According to Complainant, it "'owns and/or controls' the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL Mark pursuant to an exclusive License Agreement and Purchase and Sale Agreement with Miggle Toys, Inc., including but not limited to the rights to all trade names, marks, service marks, trademarks (specifically including 'Electric Football'), copyrights, trade secrets, website domain addresses, websites, e-mail addresses." Mr. Landsman's affidavit appears consistent with this assertion, and Mr. Landsman adds: "Upon completion of the five year term in 2017, under the Agreements all of the subject intellectual property held by Miggle and myself relating to the Miggle business, including trade names, marks, service marks, trademarks, copyrights, trade secrets, website domain addresses, websites, and e-mail addresses, and specifically including the trademark 'Electric Football,' are scheduled to transfer to Tudor."
Mr. Landsman owned the Domain Name <electricfootball.com> until December 2007, when, according to his affidavit, he "unintentionally let [it] lapse."
Respondent Vertical Axis, Inc. registered the Domain Name in December 2007 shortly after the prior registration lapsed and it became available at auction. According to the affidavit of Leandra Wilfred-Boyce, Respondent's director of finance, Respondent purchased the Domain Name "because 'electricfootball.com' is comprised solely of two common dictionary words 'electric' and 'football,' which we believed no party could claim exclusive rights." The Wilfred-Boyce affidavit goes on to say: "Respondent did not register the Disputed Domain with Complainant's trademark in mind and had no knowledge of Complainant, its web site, its business name or trademark when we purchased the Dispute Domain seven (7) years ago." The Wilfred-Boyce affidavit states that it is based on the affiant's personal knowledge, but there is no indication in the body of the affidavit as to who among Respondent's officers and employees was involved in the actual acquisition of the Domain Name. Instead, the affidavit consistently speaks in terms of Respondent's state of mind as a corporate entity, rather than Ms. Wilfred-Boyce's actual state of mind or that of any other individual.
Respondent has registered numerous domain names consisting of one or more common dictionary words, including several containing either "electric" or "football." Examples include: <audioelectric.com>, <digitalelectric.com>, <e-football.com>, <electricbikemotors.com>, <eufootball.com>, and <footballdrafts.com>. According to Ms. Wilfred-Boyce, Respondent registers "common word domain names because they best fulfill the purpose of a domain name which is easy to remember." In addition, she states, "Respondent hosts underdeveloped domain names with domain name parking services that pay a share of the advertising revenue they generate, an industry-wide accepted practice."
The Domain Name resolves to a website which provides various commercial hyperlinks, including some links to websites related to football, football games, and "Electric Football Players." According to Complainant, none of these links relates to Complainant's products and some of them relate to products which compete with Complainant's products.
Near the top of the website is the text: "Welcome to electricfootball.com." Underneath this text are two "related links": "Electric Football" and "Football Games." According to Ms. Wilfred-Boyce, the links at the site are "auto-generated by Google and are constantly changing based on Google's keyword advertising inventory and user search behavior." It is undisputed that the hyperlinks provide pay-per-click revenue for Respondent.
The website also bears a banner at the top stating: "This domain is listed at Mark.com." Next to this text is a box stating: "BUY IT."
Complainant asserts that it has established the three elements required under the Policy for a transfer of the Domain Name. According to Complainant, Respondent is improperly exploiting the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL mark by luring Internet users to the site and then realizing pay-per-click advertising revenues. As further indicia of Respondent's bad faith, Complainant argues, Respondent has offered the Domain Name for sale at its website.
Respondent offers a host of arguments in opposition to this Complaint. Some are more worthy of attention than others, and hence the Panel will gloss over or entirely skip some of the points not considered essential to this dispute or the Panel's disposition thereof. Respondent's main contention is that it has every right to register as a domain name a combination of common dictionary terms, such as "electric" and "football," and its conduct vis-à-vis the Domain Name and associated website is perfectly acceptable as a business practice.
Respondent denies having any knowledge of Complainant's mark at the time it registered the Domain Name, and hence cannot be held to have registered the Domain Name in bad faith. As corroboration for this assertion, Respondent points to numerous other domain names it has registered which contain the word "electric" or "football" plus another common word.
Respondent also argues that Complainant, as a mere licensee under a contract set to expire in 2017, lacks standing to bring this Complaint under the Policy. Respondent also argues that the actual owner of the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL registered trademark allowed the Domain Name to lapse in 2007 and therefore abandoned any rights it had in respect of the Domain Name. As such, the argument goes, Respondent cannot enjoy more rights than the licensor enjoys, and the latter's having waived its rights (through purported abandonment) to pursue Respondent means that Complainant's rights to pursue the Domain Name have also been waived.
Respondent also seeks a ruling that Complainant has engaged in Reverse Domain Name Hijacking ("RDNH") under the Policy, on the basis that this Complaint was doomed from the start and Complainant pursued it nonetheless. In this connection, Respondent also observes that Complainant (and the licensor of the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL Mark) waited seven years after Respondent's registration of the Domain Name to bring this Complaint.
Paragraph 4(a) of the Policy lists the three elements which Complainant must satisfy with respect to the Domain Name at issue in this case:
(i) the Domain Name is identical or confusingly similar to a trademark or service mark in which Complainant has rights; and
(ii) Respondent has no rights or legitimate interests in respect of the Domain Name; and
(iii) the Domain Name has been registered and is being used in bad faith.
There is no doubt that the Domain Name is identical to the registered trademark ELECTRIC FOOTBALL. Respondent, however, asserts that Complainant lacks standing to bring this Complaint because Complainant is not the owner, but a mere licensee, of the trademark.
This question has been addressed in the WIPO Overview of WIPO Panel Views on Selected UDRP Questions, Second Edition ("WIPO Overview 2.0"), under Question 1.8, entitled "Can a trademark licensee or a related company to a trademark holder have rights in a trademark for the purpose of filing a UDRP case?" The WIPO Overview 2.0 discussion of this issue is set forth below (with internal references and case citations omitted):
Consensus view: In most circumstances, a licensee of a trademark or a related company such as a subsidiary or parent to the registered holder of a trademark is considered to have rights in a trademark under the UDRP. For the purpose of filing under the UDRP, evidence of such license and/or authorization of the principal trademark holder to the bringing of the UDRP complaint would tend to support such a finding. Panels have in certain cases been prepared to infer the existence of a license and/or authorization from the particular facts, but in general, relevant evidence is desirable. Although not a requirement, panels have on occasion found it helpful, where a complaint relies on a common source of trademark rights, for all relevant rights holders to be included as co-complainants.
The Panel concludes that, by virtue of the Policy requirement that the complainant "has rights" (without restricting such rights to outright ownership or assignment) in the subject trademark, and the consensus view articulated in the WIPO Overview 2.0, Complainant has standing to pursue this proceeding.
Accordingly, the Panel concludes that Policy paragraph 4(a)(i) has been satisfied.
Pursuant to paragraph 4(c) of the Policy, Respondent may establish its rights or legitimate interests in a Domain Name, among other circumstances, by showing any of the following elements:
(i) before any notice to you [Respondent] of the dispute, your use of, or demonstrable preparations to use, the Domain Name or a name corresponding to the Domain Name in connection with a bona fide offering of goods or services; or
(ii) you [Respondent] (as an individual, business, or other organization) have been commonly known by the Domain Name, even if you have acquired no trademark or service mark rights; or
(iii) you [Respondent] are making a legitimate noncommercial or fair use of the Domain Name, without intent for commercial gain to misleadingly divert consumers or to tarnish the trademark or service mark at issue.
On this element, Respondent makes two arguments that deserve particular attention. The first is that, as Respondent argues, because the registration of domain names "that contain common words are [sic] permissible on a first-come, first-served basis," this gives rise to a right or legitimate interest in a domain name, and that on the evidence in the present case, "Respondent registered the Disputed Domain based on its common descriptive meaning and not to target a trademark." The first proposition is on its face unassailable as a general proposition. However, as applied to the evidence forming the record in this case, the Panel does not support the submission that the words "electric football" have a "common descriptive meaning" as alleged. Moreover, the numerous examples furnished by Respondent of other innocuous domain names that it has registered and which contain the words "electric" or "football" do not aid Respondent's claim on this score. Most of those other domain names, such as <italianfootball.com> and <electricfurnace.com>, actually do have some type of cognizable generic meaning when the individual words making up the domain name are taken together. Respondent's difficulty in the present case is that, although each of "electric" and "football" is a generic or descriptive word, taken together, as they are clearly meant to be, they give the reader the impression that they are not generic but are meant to indicate something far more specific and perhaps in the nature of a trademark.
The Panel is also unable to accept Respondent's second argument under the "legitimate interests" head. Respondent asserts generally that if a respondent "is using a generic word to describe his product/business or to profit from the generic value of the word without intending to take advantage of complainant's rights in the word, then it is a legitimate interest." Again, there is no real quarrel with that statement as a general proposition, subject to there being evidence that supports it in a given case. However, for reasons discussed in greater detail in the "bad faith" section below, the Panel concludes, on a balance of probabilities and having regard to the evidence adduced, which makes up the record established in this case, that Respondent is intentionally taking advantage of the Mark in which Complainant has rights.
Accordingly, the Panel concludes that Policy paragraph 4(a)(ii) has been satisfied.
Paragraph 4(b) of the Policy provides that the following circumstances, "in particular but without limitation," are evidence of the registration and use of the Domain Name in "bad faith":
(i) circumstances indicating that Respondent has registered or has acquired the Domain Name primarily for the purpose of selling, renting, or otherwise transferring the domain name registration to Complainant who is the owner of the trademark or service mark or to a competitor of that Complainant, for valuable consideration in excess of its documented out of pocket costs directly related to the Domain Name; or
(ii) that Respondent has registered the Domain Name in order to prevent the owner of the trademark or service mark from reflecting the mark in a corresponding domain name, provided that Respondent has engaged in a pattern of such conduct; or
(iii) that Respondent has registered the Domain Name primarily for the purpose of disrupting the business of a competitor; or
(iv) that by using the Domain Name, Respondent has intentionally attempted to attract, for commercial gain, Internet users to Respondent's website or other on line location, by creating a likelihood of confusion with Complainant's mark as to the source, sponsorship, affiliation, or endorsement of Respondent's website or location or of a product or service on Respondent's website or location.
The Panel is unanimous in concluding that this is a very close case. Ultimately, the Panel concludes on the basis of the specific facts established by the evidence that Complainant has carried its burden of proving that Respondent registered the Domain Name in bad faith.
The core issue of bad faith in this case is whether a respondent who has registered a domain name identical to the complainant's trademark, but who denies having any actual knowledge of the trademark at the time of registration of the domain name, can be said to have registered the domain name in bad faith. This issue has been addressed in various contexts by numerous prior panels under the Policy, and no overwhelming consensus of opinion seems to have emerged. This is readily apparent from the discussion in the WIPO Overview 2.0, under Question 3.4, entitled "Can constructive notice, or a finding that a respondent 'knew or should have known' about a trademark, or willful blindness, form a basis for finding bad faith?" The WIPO Overview 2.0 discussion of this issue is set forth below (with internal references and case citations omitted):
This paragraph considers a number of inter-related concepts which pertain to the issue of a domain name registrant's "knowledge" of the relevant trademark, as discussed by WIPO UDRP panels.
Constructive Notice: Panels have mostly declined to introduce the US concept of constructive (deemed) notice per se into the UDRP. However, some panels have been prepared to do so in certain circumstances including where a respondent was located in the US and a complainant had a federal US trademark registered before the domain name was obtained by the respondent, and there are indicia of cybersquatting. In such cases, in the absence of positive evidence that the respondent had actual notice, a finding that the respondent was on constructive notice of the complainant's registered trademark has sometimes been used to support a finding of bad faith, with the panel concluding that the respondent had relevant notice of the trademark. Some panels in this type of case have been less inclined to find registration in bad faith based solely upon a claim of such notice where the complainant's trademark is less well-known or corresponds to a common word or phrase.
"Knew or Should Have Known": Some panels have in certain circumstances found bad faith registration based in part on proof that the respondent "knew or should have known" about the existence of the complainant's trademark (other than through the above-mentioned US concept of constructive notice). This may be seen as an instance of the panel attributing readily obtainable knowledge to a respondent even if the respondent avers that it did not have the knowledge. Circumstances in which panels have made such finding have included those in which the complainant's trademark was shown to be well-known or in wide use on the Internet or otherwise at the time the domain name was registered, or when a respondent's denial of knowledge is otherwise highly improbable. Some panels have applied a related concept of "constructive knowledge" in particular circumstances, notably where a respondent has acquired a domain name through a process of automated bulk transfer of domain names. Some panels have adopted this approach on the back of paragraph 2 of the UDRP which puts some burden on registrants where it states: "It is your responsibility to determine whether your domain name registration infringes or violates someone else's rights." Other panels have observed that unless some level of constructive knowledge is recognized, automated transfers will represent a blanket defense to bad faith.
Willful Blindness: Some panels have applied a concept of willful blindness in UDRP cases as a basis for finding bad faith. For example, a respondent's registration of large numbers of domain names through automated processes, with no appropriate mechanism for ascertaining whether these may be identical or confusingly similar to such trademarks, may support a finding of bad faith. Panels holding that a respondent must accept the consequences of turning a blind eye to any third-party trademarks through failure to conduct adequate searches have tended to limit the application of this principle to cases in which the respondent is a professional domain name registrant, or has been found to have engaged in a pattern of abusive registration and use of domain names identical or confusingly similar to trademarks (although some panels have also noted that, in theory, such general principle may be just as applicable to non-professional domain name registrants, who, after all, are also subject to paragraph 2 of the UDRP, which provides: "It is your responsibility to determine whether your domain name registration infringes or violates someone else's rights.")
Some panels have found that in certain circumstances there may be an affirmative obligation on registrants more generally to make reasonable good faith efforts to avoid registering and using a domain name that is identical or confusingly similar to a mark held by others, for example, through an Internet search on the domain name through Google or Yahoo!.
A review of the foregoing discussion from the WIPO Overview 2.0 makes it clear that, in a given case, the record put before the panel by the parties, by evidence adduced during the proceeding, may prove critical to the disposition of the dispute at hand. The only real exception to this proposition appears to the Panel to be where the panel in the proceeding in question had adopted a rather categorical view about the duties, if any, to be imposed on a respondent to investigate whether registration and use of the prospective domain name would infringe the trademark rights of a third party. Those panelists who believe on principle that a domain name registrant is under some type of affirmative duty to ensure that the subject domain name will not violate another's rights seem to the Panel to be far more likely to find bad faith registration under a concept of "constructive notice" or a concept that, as it is sometimes put, the respondent "knew or should have known."1
In the present case, the Panel does not accept that constructive notice, i.e., the legal incident under United States trademark law of imputing knowledge to a party by virtue of the fact that a trademark is registered, even absent any evidence of actual knowledge of that mark's existence, is a substitute for the requirement in the Policy that bad faith registration of a domain name requires a showing that the respondent more likely than not actually knew of the complainant's mark. The Panel here observes further in this vein that constructive notice is particularly ill-suited to circumstances where the complainant holds (or has rights to) a registered trademark in one country (in this case the United States) and the respondent resides in another country (Barbados).
The Panel is thus of the view that the concept of constructive notice will not get the job done here for Complainant. Under the WIPO Overview 2.0, other concepts – such as "should have known" and "willful blindness" – have been discussed, and even adopted in certain cases to establish that a respondent registered a domain name in bad faith. Again, it is not apparent that an overwhelming consensus has emerged in support of these concepts, and caveats abound. Moreover, the factual contexts vary from case to case, and various combinations of factors (e.g., whether the domain name had previously been registered by another party but had expired, whether the respondent is a bulk domain name registrant or uses automated systems to search for and register domain names, whether the domain name corresponds to a common word or phrase, whether the trademark is well-known, etc.) differ in prominence from case to case.
Ultimately, the Panel here does not embrace the concept that a respondent "should have known" or had shown "willful blindness" as substitutes for a finding that, on a balance of probabilities as developed by the record at hand, Respondent more likely than not had actual knowledge of the trademark invoked by Complainant.2 Rather, the Panel makes its finding regarding bad faith registration by asking whether it is more likely than not from the record of the evidence in the proceeding that Respondent had the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL trademark in mind when registering the Domain Name.
The Panel concludes that Complainant has carried its burden of proving that Respondent more likely than not had the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL Mark in mind when registering the Domain Name. That is so for the following reasons.
First, although Respondent argues that "electric" and "football" are purely descriptive words, it does not argue that the combined term "electric football" is purely descriptive and the Panel's opinion is to the same effect.
Second, the very expression "Electric Football", being as it is an unusual combination of words, connotes and gives the impression that it is invoking a specific named product or brand. Accordingly, the expression puts a potential registrant of the Domain Name on notice that it may well be about to use another party's trademark and that it should, before registering the Domain Name, conduct some form of search to ascertain whether this is so or not.
Third, the website to which the Domain Name resolves contains links – which presumably generate per-click revenue for Respondent – to various sites, including "Electric Football", "Football Games", "Electric Football Players" and various online football games. These terms suggest to the Internet user who arrives at Respondent's website that football games are available through the hyperlinks, and even that "Electric Football Players", i.e., game pieces for Complainant's game, are available. In addition, one version of the website put into the record of evidence shows several sponsored listings, including two companies under the header "Play Football Game." Both of these links advertise a "fun and free football game."
Hence, an Internet user who keyed in the Domain Name in search of Complainant's product promoted under the trademark ELECTRIC FOOTBALL would land at a website which did not offer Complainant's game, but invited the visitor to check out some other (and reportedly free) football games, thus potentially diverting business away from Complainant. As a result, the visitor might well opt for an alternative to Complainant's game, Respondent will have derived some pay-per-click revenue from the whole episode, and Complainant's business will have suffered from the diversion of Internet hits to competitors of Complainant.
The further difficulty for Respondent on the evidence is that the website contains what purport to be links to "Tudor Electric Football Teams" and "Miggle Electric Football teams." These links clearly have the potential, and presumably the intention, of suggesting to the Internet user that the website is under some sort of imprimatur of the two companies, namely Complainant and Miggle Toys, most closely associated with the trademarked Electric Football game.
Finally, although it is an open question as to precisely how prominent and well-known the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL brand and mark were at the time Respondent acquired the Domain Name in 2007, the uncontradicted evidence is that the actual game has been promoted in the United States for 67 years and under the trademark ELECTRIC FOOTBALL since at least its registration as a trademark on May 11, 1999. The Supplementary Declaration of Mr. Strohm, the founder and president of Tudor Games, is instructive in this regard, as it describes the game's popularity and refers to the book, The Unforgettable Buzz: The History of Electric Football and Tudor Games, extracts from which appear on the website "http://theunforgettablebuzz.com". That website itself carries a great deal of other information about the history of the game and the specific involvement in its development by Mr. Landsman, the registered owner of the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL Mark. The Panel concludes on the basis of this evidence that the history of the game that is offered under the Mark shows that by 2007, although the product had gone through some ebb and flow of popularity, it had achieved reasonable prominence, at least within the United States. That degree of prominence is a further indication that anyone considering the registration of the Domain Name <electricfootball.com> in 2007 probably had knowledge that it was also the brand of a reasonably well-known product.
Under these circumstances, the Panel takes the view that although it is not conclusive, Respondent more likely than not had the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL mark in mind when registering the Domain Name. The use to which the Domain Name has been put over the years suggests that Respondent more likely than not was aware of the fact that ELECTRIC FOOTBALL was a football game marketed commercially by a company, even if the precise name of the trademark owner may not have been known. Put another way, the Panel does not accept on the evidence available to it that Respondent had no knowledge of the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL Mark when it registered the Domain Name.
Whether such knowledge came to Respondent by way of one or more of its officers or employees, or by way of some third party agent using computer algorithms, it came to Respondent. The Panel is careful to observe that it does not take issue with Respondent's overall business model, or with the fact that it searches and registers domain names on an automated basis, or with the fact that its parking page creates automated content and hyperlinks. At some point along the way, however, a respondent must take some responsibility for the acts of its own people and/or automated agents when it stumbles upon a domain name available for purchase that is potentially identical to or confusingly similar to another party's registered trademark. Notwithstanding technological facilities available to Respondent and others, paragraph 2 of the Policy does state that the registrant of a domain name is responsible for determining whether its domain name registration violates another party's rights.
It was also entirely within Respondent's power to put up a website which created no prospect of consumer confusion vis-à-vis the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL product. Had Respondent done so, it might have been able to prevail in this case. Instead, the evidence is that, by using Complainant's trademark as the entirety of its Domain Name, it has put up a website that offers alternative goods and services to those of Complainant, even going as far as to carry links to "Tudor Electric Football Teams" and "Miggle Electric Football teams" associated with Complainant's trademarked products. This virtually guarantees that some Internet users will assume that the website is associated in some way with those products.
In reaching its decision, the Panel need not and does not rely on the concepts, referred to above, of whether a respondent "should have known" of a trademark or "willful blindness". Rather, on record of the evidence and in the specific circumstances of the case, the Panel finds that Respondent had the requisite knowledge of Complainant's mark to establish bad faith registration. As regards the allegation of bad faith use, the Panel concludes that the evidence brings the case within Policy paragraph 4(b)(iv) by virtue of Respondent's deriving pay-per-click revenues from links provided at a website accessible via a Domain Name which creates a likelihood of confusion with the ELECTRIC FOOTBALL Mark.
Accordingly, the Panel concludes that Policy paragraph 4(a)(iii) has been satisfied.
Finally, as Complainant has succeeded, it is not necessary to discuss the issue of Reverse Domain Name Hijacking, except to say that Complainant was clearly entitled to file the Complaint to defend its trademark interests and that to do so could not be regarded as Reverse Domain Name Hijacking.
For the foregoing reasons, in accordance with paragraphs 4(i) of the Policy and 15 of the Rules, the Panel orders that the Disputed Domain Name <electricfootball.com> be transferred to Complainant.
Robert A. Badgley
Presiding Panelist
Angela Fox
Panelist
The Hon Neil Brown Q.C.
Panelist
Date: January 12, 2014
1 An excellent discussion of this issue is laid out in the majority and dissenting opinions in an early case, Red Nacional De Los Ferrocarriles Espanoles v. Ox90, WIPO Case No. D2001-0981 (involving <renfe.com>). The fact that this issue divides panelists many years later underscores how difficult this issue has been in many cases.
2 The WIPO Overview 2.0 states, in connection with the "should have known" concept: "Circumstances in which panels have made such finding have included those in which the complainant's trademark was shown to be well-known or in wide use on the Internet or otherwise at the time the domain name was registered, or when a respondent's denial of knowledge is otherwise highly improbable."