Take your case to Geneva.
Protecting your brand online.
The World Intellectual Property Organization (“WIPO”) provides a cost-effective remedy for trademark owners—the ability to force transfer of a domain name. Generally, in order to take advantage of this remedy you must have a registered trademark, someone else must have registered a domain name that is identical or confusingly similar to your trademark, the domain name registrant has no legitimate interests in the domain name, and the domain name is being used in bad faith.
How does this work? Let’s say you are Air France. You have a registered trademark for “Air France” for air travel services. Someone registers AirFrance.biz and provides links to a variety of travel related services on that site. Under this kind of fact situation, Air France could lodge a complaint with WIPO and obtain an order to transfer the domain name. Short, sweet, simple.

