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Re: [bc-gnso] FW: New ICA Post on the LRO

  • To: Phil Corwin <psc@xxxxxxxxxxx>, "abrams@xxxxxxxxxx" <abrams@xxxxxxxxxx>, "bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx" <bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx>
  • Subject: Re: [bc-gnso] FW: New ICA Post on the LRO
  • From: "J. Scott Evans" <jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 6 Aug 2013 10:27:44 -0700 (PDT)

Phil:

You are correct.  There may be non-infringing scenarios, just like there are 
non-infringing domain name speculation vs. cybersquatting.  Some overzealous 
attorneys conflate the two into the same thing.  I don't.  My comment was 
simply about an infringing use of the cross-dot example raised by Andy.

jse
 
j. scott evans -  head of global brand, domains & copyright - Yahoo! Inc. - 
408.349.1385 - jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx




________________________________
 From: Phil Corwin <psc@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: J. Scott Evans <jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx>; "abrams@xxxxxxxxxx" 
<abrams@xxxxxxxxxx>; "bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx" <bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx> 
Sent: Tuesday, August 6, 2013 9:25 AM
Subject: RE: [bc-gnso] FW: New ICA Post on the LRO
 


 
That would be an interesting lawsuit, J. Scott. I don’t know of any US domain 
trademark infringement case that has ever considered a “cross-dot” reading of 
the entire domain name, left side and right, so unless I’m mistaken in that it 
would set a precedent. 
 
The outcome might well depend on the facts and circumstances. If someone were 
brazen enough to register federal.express for an overnight delivery service not 
affiliated with Federal Express a court certainly might be willing to read both 
sides together. However, there are other possible scenarios. For example, in 
Washington there is an urban men’s clothing store named Federal that is 
affiliated with a skateboard store named Palace 5. My dictionary contains 
several definition for “express”, including “operating at high speed” as an 
adjective. I’m not sure that if Federal registered federal.express and used it 
as a webpage to promote skateboard attire that infringement would be found, 
especially given USPTO’s view and court rulings up to now that the right of the 
dot serves no source identification function.
 
Overall, I think the potential for such “cross-dot” instances of potential 
infringement would be fairly rare, but we’ll see.
 
But I do appreciate the recognition that dealing with “cross-dot” readings 
could require amendment of the UDRP. Again, my original point is that if there 
is a need to address this issue it should be done in a considered fashion with 
community input and not on an ad hoc basis by individual UDRP examiners. 
 
Best, Philip
 
 
Philip S. Corwin, Founding Principal
Virtualaw LLC
1155 F Street, NW
Suite 1050
Washington, DC 20004
202-559-8597/Direct
202-559-8750/Fax
202-255-6172/cell
 
Twitter: @VlawDC
 
"Luck is the residue of design" -- Branch Rickey
 
From:J. Scott Evans [mailto:jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Tuesday, August 06, 2013 6:59 AM
To: Phil Corwin; abrams@xxxxxxxxxx; bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: [bc-gnso] FW: New ICA Post on the LRO
 
Why amend the UDRP? Sue them for will trademark infringement, then you get 
damages.

Sent from Yahoo! Mail for iPhone 
 

________________________________
 
From: Phil Corwin <psc@xxxxxxxxxxx>; 
To: Andy Abrams <abrams@xxxxxxxxxx>; jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx 
<jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx>; bc - GNSO list <bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx>; 
Subject: RE: [bc-gnso] FW: New ICA Post on the LRO 
Sent: Tue, Aug 6, 2013 10:25:11 AM 
 
You are most welcome, Andy. I’m glad that you thought my post captured the LRO 
process well. 
 
In regard to your comment – “However, an interesting side-issue is whether the 
UDRP and URS panels will start to include TLDs as a factor in determining 
cybersquatting at the second level (e.g., cross-dot trademarks such as 
federal.express or you.tube).  And if so, perhaps cross-dot trademarks should 
be included in Sunrise?’ – these “side issues” are complex and would represent 
a fundamental change in UDRP and subsidiary URS policy, which today only 
contemplates the name to the left or the dot with no consideration of the top 
level domain on the right side. Consideration of the right side in either UDRP 
or URS proceedings or as a matter of sunrise protection would be, I believe, a 
significant change in policy that requires extensive consideration, perhaps 
even a PDP, prior to any contemplated change in the scope of these protections. 
This isn’t just a new gTLD issue – there are existing TLDs, especially ccTLDs 
like .me and .tv, that can
 raise similar questions. So far as I know there was absolutely no 
consideration or discussion of inclusion of right of the dot considerations in 
the development of the URS or TMC. Changes of this consequence should not be 
considered, much less implemented, on the fly absent adequate consideration.
 
The GNSO decided in December 2011 that any PDP related to alteration of the 
UDRP should not be initiated until eighteen months after the introduction of 
new gTLDs.  That may forestall any consideration of your suggestion unless 
there is a broad community desire to accelerate the timetable.
 
Best regards,
Philip
 
 
Philip S. Corwin, Founding Principal
Virtualaw LLC
1155 F Street, NW
Suite 1050
Washington, DC 20004
202-559-8597/Direct
202-559-8750/Fax
202-255-6172/cell
 
Twitter: @VlawDC
 
"Luck is the residue of design" -- Branch Rickey
 
From:Andy Abrams [mailto:abrams@xxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Monday, August 05, 2013 8:22 PM
To: Phil Corwin; jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx; bc - GNSO list
Subject: Re: [bc-gnso] FW: New ICA Post on the LRO
 
Thanks to Phil for forwarding us his article - it captures the LRO process 
well.  For what it's worth, I'm another trademark attorney that agrees with J. 
Scott that the system is actually working well, and brand owners shouldn't 
expect to preemptively stop the use of a generic term for an open TLD prior to 
any commercial activity.  However, an interesting side-issue is whether the 
UDRP and URS panels will start to include TLDs as a factor in determining 
cybersquatting at the second level (e.g., cross-dot trademarks such as 
federal.express or you.tube).  And if so, perhaps cross-dot trademarks should 
be included in Sunrise?
 
Andy
 
On Mon, Aug 5, 2013 at 8:08 AM, J. Scott Evans <jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Phil:
 
The remedy provided is not more narrow than that provided under current 
national and international laws.  If trademark owners want an absolute monopoly 
on a term then, yes, they will have to file for a top level domain in round 
two.  Paul McGrady has been saying that the first come, first served method of 
distribution of top level domains by ICANN could lead to "permanent string 
preclusion" for those brands who have a dictionary term as a trademark.  He has 
been saying this since 2008.  Unfortunately, some brands don't listen.  Go 
figure!
 
j. scott evans -  head of global brand, domains & copyright - Yahoo! Inc. - 
408.349.1385 - jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx
 

________________________________
 
From: Phil Corwin <psc@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: J. Scott Evans <jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx> 
Cc: "bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx" <bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx> 
Sent: Monday, August 5, 2013 7:58 AM
Subject: RE: [bc-gnso] FW: New ICA Post on the LRO
 
Agree that it’s working as intended, but doubt that most perceived how narrow a 
remedy it would be. 
 
Main takeaway for TM owners is that if you want to control your generic brand 
or product at top level of the DNS you need to submit a defensive application 
in 2nd round.
 
As for adding LRO to acronym list – well of course! 
 
Philip S. Corwin, Founding Principal
Virtualaw LLC
1155 F Street, NW
Suite 1050
Washington, DC 20004
202-559-8597/Direct
202-559-8750/Fax
202-255-6172/cell
 
Twitter: @VlawDC
 
"Luck is the residue of design" -- Branch Rickey
 
From:J. Scott Evans [mailto:jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Sunday, August 04, 2013 11:41 PM
To: Phil Corwin
Cc: bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [bc-gnso] FW: New ICA Post on the LRO
 
That's correct you don't, but the article seems to imply that the LRO sets too 
high a burden or is somehow flawed and, for this reason, trademark owners are 
getting the proverbial "shaft."  I think a LRO would work if a trademark owner 
could prove a likelihood of confusion or some actual harm.  I don't think you 
are sufficiently harmed just because someone plans to use the a generic term 
(that may also serve as someone's trademark) for non-infringing purposes.  I 
would argue to you the the LRO is working perfectly, much like the UDRP works 
perfectly when trademark owners that can meet the high burden win.
 
In sum, I think the system is working as it was intended.  I know these results 
are making some trademark owners unhappy, but trademark law is basically a 
consumer protection statute, so a complainant should have to show some consumer 
harm or confusion, not the angst of a marketing department that was asleep at 
the wheel since June 2008.
 
J. Scott
 
j. scott evans -  head of global brand, domains & copyright - Yahoo! Inc. - 
408.349.1385 - jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx
 

________________________________
 
From:Phil Corwin <psc@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: J. Scott Evans <jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx> 
Cc: "bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx" <bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx> 
Sent: Sunday, August 4, 2013 8:14 PM
Subject: Re: [bc-gnso] FW: New ICA Post on the LRO
 
I don't disagree, and never said they were. 

Philip S. Corwin, Founding Principal 
Virtualaw LLC
1155 F Street, NW
Suite 1050
Washington, DC 20004
202-559-8597/Direct
202-559-8750/Fax
202-255-6172/Cell
 
Twitter: @VLawDC
 
"Luck is the residue of design" -- Branch Rickey
 
Sent from my iPad

On Aug 4, 2013, at 10:51 PM, "J. Scott Evans" <jscottevans@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I am not so sure any of these cases were wrongly decided. 
>
>Sent from Yahoo! Mail for iPhone 
> 
>
>________________________________
> 
>From: Phil Corwin <psc@xxxxxxxxxxx>; 
>To: bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx <bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx>; 
>Subject: [bc-gnso] FW: New ICA Post on the LRO 
>Sent: Sun, Aug 4, 2013 10:05:16 PM 
> 
>FYI/BC members may find my latest opinion piece of some interest---
> 
>http://internetcommerce.org/LROlooksDOA
> 
>LRO Looks DOA
> 
>The Legal Rights Objection (LRO) mechanism administered by the World 
>Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) on behalf of ICANN is starting to 
>look like the reverse FISA Court of domain name system (DNS) rights protection 
>mechanisms (RPMs) at the top level. In FISA Court, the government always wins 
>– at WIPO, the LRO complainant always loses.
>The FISA Court is of course the venue in which the U.S. government requests a 
>surveillance warrant against a suspected foreign intelligence agent and is 
>never denied (well, almost never – since the process started in 1979, 11 
>requests have been denied out of a total of 33,942  received through the end 
>of 2012[1]). FISA Court proceedings are secret and non-adversarial, with only 
>government lawyers presenting arguments. In contrast, the decisions resulting 
>from LRO proceedings are published, and both complainant and respondent have 
>equal ability to present their arguments. Yet, as of Friday, August 2nd all 28 
>of the decided LRO complaints, out of a total of 69 filed, resulted in losses 
>for the complainants[2]. 
>The lopsided results arouse suspicions that trademark interests may have been 
>fighting the last war and too intensely focused on potential cybersquatting at 
>the second level (a concern that we believe is overblown due to the low 
>traffic prospects for many new gTLDs). They consequently sought and obtained 
>the Trademark Clearinghouse (TMC), Uniform Rapid Suspension (URS) RPMs – and 
>also proposed other second level remedies such as a Global Protected Marks 
>List (GPML) that ICANN did not grant. Yet they may have failed to adequately 
>consider whether top level protections were sufficient, and in particular 
>whether the threshold standard for successfully prosecuting a LRO was 
>unattainably high. 
>As Thomas O’Toole observed in an excellent analysis recently posted on 
>Bloomberg BNA’s E-Commerce and Tech Law Blog[3]:
>[T]he only surprise the future might hold is the faint prospect that a WIPO 
>panelist might actually rule in favor of a trademark owner…The biggest lesson 
>so far has been that the Legal Rights Objection process is wholly ineffective 
>for trademark owners seeking to knock down proposed domains containing generic 
>strings. In many cases, companies owning marks for terms such as EXPRESS, 
>HOME, VIP, LIMITED, MAIL, TUNES have lost LROs to domain applicants with no 
>intellectual property rights in those terms whatsoever. Pinterest's failed 
>challenge to Amazon's proposed .pin domain was particularly ominous for mark 
>owners, because Amazon seems pretty clearly to be moving in on Pinterest's 
>business…
>The reason for this dour outlook can be found in passages from two early LRO 
>rulings: the first one, Right at Home v. Johnson Shareholdings Inc., No. 
>LRO2013-0300 (WIPO, July 3, 2013); and the second, my favorite, Express LLC v. 
>Sea Sunset LLC, No. LRO2013-0022 (WIPO, July 9, 2013)…
>In Right at Home, panelist Robert A. Badgley offered the first interpretation 
>of key terms in Section 3.5 of ICANN's New gTLD Applicant Guidebook. The 
>guidebook uses highly qualified language, directing LRO panelists to decide 
>whether the proposed new domain "takes unfair advantage" of the trademark 
>owner's rights, or "unjustifiably impairs" the value of the mark, or creates 
>an "impermissible likelihood of confusion" between the mark and the proposed 
>domain.
>In Badgley's view, this language creates a very high burden for 
>trademark-based objections…Obviously, it is going to be very difficult for any 
>trademark owner to demonstrate that a proposed domain is so fishy it satisfies 
>the "something untoward ... if not to the level of bad faith" standard…
>The second opinion, Express LLC v. Sea Sunset LLC, was one of the better 
>opinions (and I am including the federal court stuff that we wade through 
>every day) I have read in a while. Panelist Frederick M. Abbott carefully 
>summarized the arguments on each side (there are good lessons here for 
>attorneys working on the next round of legal rights objections), and the law 
>that he was required to apply to the dispute. When Abbott turned to the 
>reasoning behind his decision to reject Express LCC's objection to the 
>proposed .express top-level domain, I got that sense that this panelist was a 
>teeny bit irked that ICANN itself had not made the hard policy choices that 
>the LRO had just dropped in his lap. It's one thing to ask a panelist to 
>transfer a domain name that might have cost the registrant $10 or so; and it's 
>quite another to ask a panelist to upset an investment of at least a 
>half-million dollars in a new top-level domain. All based on a trademark
 registration for a generic term, in a single market, issued by a single 
government entity. Abbott declined to do it…
>These two opinions, taken together, look like a terminal diagnosis for 
>trademark owners with rights in generic terms. Right at Home creates a very 
>permissive standard for what constitutes "unfair advantage" by a domain 
>applicant. Express LLC states, almost categorically, that it is "not 
>reasonable" to allow a trademark owner for a generic term to prevent that term 
>from being used as a top-level domain.
>O’Toole goes on to speculate that a trademark owner like Express LLC will have 
>equally poor chances of success if it attempts to block others’ use of such 
>hypothetical second level domains as clothing.express, fashion.express, or 
>shoes.express using the traditional UDRP or the new TMC and URS RPMs -- 
>because all of them focus on the domain name to the left of the dot and pay no 
>heed to the gTLD to the right – and because Express holds no trademark rights 
>in those hypothetical generic terms on the left side. We largely agree with 
>his analysis, and suspect that this could be the next big trademark protection 
>issue looming on ICANN’s horizon as brands complain about the necessity and 
>cost of registering relevant domains at a gTLD that matches one of its 
>trademarks but is operated by a third party (and, by the way, it’s not clear 
>that a brand like Express would have any special “sunrise” registration 
>priority for potential second level domains
 along the lines of O’Toole’s speculation). Other questions arise, such as 
whether Federal Express should have priority rights to, or a potential 
infringement claim against, federal.express.
>Of course, no one was reckless enough to pay a $185,000 gTLD application fee, 
>plus multiple related legal, consulting, and technical costs, to try to 
>“squat’ at the top level on a unique trademark like Google or Microsoft. But 
>when it comes to a dictionary word like Express, unless the applicant was so 
>clueless as to propose its use solely for fashionable clothing, the LRO is 
>essentially useless – and that may be the correct result. Indeed, short of 
>halting the program, it’s not really clear how one can have a generic word TLD 
>program without allowing the addition of top level domains that are identical 
>to someone’s trademark for something; and that alone is not sufficient to 
>prove trademark infringement.
>Domain industry observers such as Andrew Allemann have opined that “The LRO is 
>working just fine, thank you”[4], weighing in with this analysis:
>The LRO was created to assuage fears that someone would cybersquat on a top 
>level domain…Objections were filed against .VIP, .mail, and .home. Now, you 
>tell me: when you hear these terms, what brand do you think is being 
>cybersquatted?
>Many of the objections were filed by competing applicants that engaged in 
>trademark frontrunning by obtaining dubious trademarks for the string. Others, 
>such as the United States Postal Service’s objection to .mail, were based on 
>stretched interpretations of a trademark (and that’s being generous).
>Another industry analyst, Kevin Murphy, has just declared that he will no 
>longer report automatically on forthcoming WIPO decisions in LRO cases, 
>stating[5]:
>The Legal Rights Objection has, I think, said pretty much everything it’s 
>going to say in this new gTLD application round. I’m feeling pretty confident 
>we can predict that all outstanding LROs will fail.
>This prediction is based largely on the fact that the 69 LROs filed in this 
>round all pretty much fall into three categories.
>·        Front-running.These are the cases where the objector is an applicant 
>that secured a trademark on its chosen gTLD string, usually with the dot, just 
>in order to game the LRO process…
>·        Brand v Brand.The objector may or may not be an applicant too, but 
>both it and the respondent both own legit trademarks on the string in 
>question. WIPO’s LRO panelists have made it clear, most recently yesterday in 
>Merck v Merck (pdf) and Merck v Merck (pdf), that having a famous brand does 
>not give you the right to block somebody else from owning a matching famous 
>brand as a gTLD.
>·        Generic trademarks.Cases where an owner of a legit brand that matches 
>a dictionary word files an objection against an applicant for the same string 
>that proposes to use it in its generic sense. See Express v Donuts, for 
>example. Panelists have found that unless there’s some nefarious intent by the 
>applicant, the mandatory second-level rights protection mechanisms new gTLD 
>registries must abide by are sufficient to protect trademark rights.
>In short, the LRO may be one of many deterrents to top-level cybersquatting, 
>but has proven itself an essentially useless cash sink if you want to prevent 
>the use of a trademark at the top level.
>The impact of this, I believe, will be to give new gTLD consultants another 
>excellent reason to push defensive gTLD applications on big brands in future 
>new gTLD rounds.
> 
>We largely agree with Murphy’s analysis. There may well be a few cases in the 
>remaining objections to be adjudicated by WIPO in which the complainant 
>prevails. But we suspect that they will be such unique outliers that they will 
>actually reinforce what an exceedingly narrow remedy the LRO has turned out to 
>be. That limited utility has already led one disgruntled complainant/competing 
>applicant to declare, “Seems the entire WIPO LRO process was set-up to fail by 
>ICANN with the guidelines they gave the Panelists.”[6]
>And, as Murphy observes, filing a LRO with WIPO is not inexpensive. Total 
>filing fees for a single objection to a single new gTLD application can range 
>from $10,000 for a single-expert panel, and up to $23,000 for a 3-expert 
>panel[7]. On top of the fees there are of course legal costs for the attorney 
>preparing the complaint and related expenses for amassing documentation. If 
>the LRO continues to be a preordained shutout for complainants then it is 
>unlikely that it will be used very much at all in the second round of gTLD 
>applications unless significant – and undoubtedly controversial – changes are 
>made in the adjudication standard to give complainants a higher probability of 
>prevailing.
>As for the other objection procedure available to third parties, the Community 
>Objection[8] administered by the International Centre for Expertise of the ICC 
>(International Chamber of Commerce), no judgment can yet be rendered on its 
>efficacy because the Center has yet to issue a single decision on the dozens 
>of cases[9] filed with it. However, with standing limited to established 
>institutions associated within a clearly defined community objectors first 
>have to surmount that procedural hurdle, and then make the string substantive  
>case that there is substantial opposition to the gTLD application from a 
>significant portion of the community to which the gTLD string may be 
>explicitly or implicitly targeted. Additionally, complaints were voiced at the 
>recent Public Forum in Durban that ICC fees[10] , which begin at 17,000 Euro 
>but can quickly mount given the 450 Euro hourly rate for expert arbitrators, 
>are not affordable for many community organizations.
>Summing up, the LRO may well have been an effective deterrent against 
>applications for unique trademarked terms but has so far been useless in 
>regard to applications for generic word trademarks, regardless of the 
>trademark’s strength and legitimacy. Its lack of general applicability also 
>seems to be setting up a series of second level domain disputes that may well 
>be outside the existing scope of the UDRP, URS, TMC, or other available rights 
>protection and prioritization mechanisms. All of this may lead to further 
>debate within ICANN on the appropriate scope of trademark rights protections– 
>as well as litigation being filed by unsuccessful complainants who refuse to 
>take WIPO’s decision as the final judgment on their claims. 
>The clear lesson to brand owners of generic word trademarks is this: If and 
>when the second round of new gTLD applications commences, if you wish to own 
>your trademark at the top level of the DNS (or at least stop others from 
>owning it) you had better open your wallet and apply for it. That compulsion 
>toward unwanted defensive registrations is almost sure to generate further 
>controversy amid charges that ICANN has developed a Midas Touch-like mechanism 
>for generating perpetual revenues for application and use fees for the 
>protection of dictionary words. 
>Of course, the inflow of defensive applications for generic word trademarks 
>could be a mere trickle compared to the potential surge of defensive and 
>offensive applications for non-trademarked generic words if ICANN ultimately 
>spurs the Governmental Advisory Committee (GAC) advice to prohibit “closed 
>generic” gTLDs unless they satisfy a high public interest standard. In that 
>scenario, every company of any heft will have to seriously consider gTLD 
>applications for the major language words describing its key activities and 
>products, lest a competitor do so first and lock them away. But that’s an 
>issue falling outside any trademark protection debate and a discussion for 
>another day.
>[1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FISA_Court
>[2]http://www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/lro/cases/
>[3]http://www.bna.com/icann-legal-rights-b17179875369/
>[4]http://domainnamewire.com/2013/08/01/the-lro-is-working-just-fine-thank-you/
>[5]http://domainincite.com/13949-thats-all-folks-no-more-lro-news
>[6]http://www.thedomains.com/2013/07/31/constantinos-roussos-of-dotmusic-limited-the-entire-wipo-lro-process-was-set-up-to-fail-by-icann/
>[7]http://www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/lro/fees/
>[8]http://www.iccwbo.org/products-and-services/arbitration-and-adr/expertise/introduction-to-icann-new-gtld-dispute-resolution/
>[9]http://www.iccwbo.org/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=19327354883
>[10]http://www.iccwbo.org/products-and-services/arbitration-and-adr/expertise/icann-new-gtld-dispute-resolution/costs-and-payments/
> 
> 
>Philip S. Corwin, Founding Principal
>Virtualaw LLC
>1155 F Street, NW
>Suite 1050
>Washington, DC 20004
>202-559-8597/Direct
>202-559-8750/Fax
>202-255-6172/cell
> 
>Twitter: @VlawDC
> 
>"Luck is the residue of design" -- Branch Rickey
> 
>
>
>
>________________________________
> 
>
>________________________________
> 
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>
>
>________________________________
> 
>
>________________________________
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>________________________________
> 
>[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FISA_Court 
>[2] http://www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/lro/cases/ 
>[3] http://www.bna.com/icann-legal-rights-b17179875369/ 
>[4] 
>http://domainnamewire.com/2013/08/01/the-lro-is-working-just-fine-thank-you/ 
>[5] http://domainincite.com/13949-thats-all-folks-no-more-lro-news 
>[6] 
>http://www.thedomains.com/2013/07/31/constantinos-roussos-of-dotmusic-limited-the-entire-wipo-lro-process-was-set-up-to-fail-by-icann/
> 
>[7] http://www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/lro/fees/ 
>[8] 
>http://www.iccwbo.org/products-and-services/arbitration-and-adr/expertise/introduction-to-icann-new-gtld-dispute-resolution/
> 
>[9] http://www.iccwbo.org/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=19327354883 
>[10] 
>http://www.iccwbo.org/products-and-services/arbitration-and-adr/expertise/icann-new-gtld-dispute-resolution/costs-and-payments/
>  
 

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-- 
Andy Abrams | Trademark Counsel
Google | 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043
(650) 669-8752

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