Thursday , March 30 2023

Caribou.com, purchased for $91k, saved in UDRP

UK company filed a UDRP against valuable dictionary word domain.

A picture of a heard of caribou with the words Caribou.com UDRP

A domain investor who acquired caribou.com for $91,482 has successfully defended the domain in a UDRP.

Scott Dylan, a shareholder in UK delivery and logistics company Caribou, filed the complaint. The company uses the domain WeAreCaribou.com.

The domain investor, K-Ventures FZE LLC, owns a number of animal domain names, including beluga.com, hippopotamus.com, iguana.com, raccoon.com, scampi.com and wapiti.com. It acquired caribou.com in 2019.

A domain broker representing K-Ventures reached out to the Complainant’s company earlier this year. At the same time, the broker contacted a bioscience company named Caribou that went public and one other company with the same name.

This apparently triggered the Complainant’s interest and subsequent UDRP filing.

The three-person World Intellectual Property Organization panel found that the domain wasn’t registered and used in bad faith. It did not consider reverse domain name hijacking.

Sheridans, a media and technology law firm, represented the Complainant. Zak Muscovitch of Muscovitch Law P.C. represented the domain owner.

Post link: Caribou.com, purchased for $91k, saved in UDRP

© DomainNameWire.com 2021. This is copyrighted content. Domain Name Wire full-text RSS feeds are made available for personal use only, and may not be published on any site without permission. If you see this message on a website, contact editor (at) domainnamewire.com. Latest domain news at DNW.com: Domain Name Wire.

About Andrew Allemann

Check Also

Hmm. A Web3 domain company wants to trademark .swoosh

I bet Nike won’t like this. Freename AG, one of many initiatives offering blockchain-based domain …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sahifa Theme License is not validated, Go to the theme options page to validate the license, You need a single license for each domain name.