FACTS ASSERTED BY THE COMPLAINANT AND NOT CONTESTED BY THE RESPONDENT:
The Complainant (previously Panya International s.r.o.) is a legal successor of the company which was earlier named Avast Software s.r.o. (previously Avast Software a.s.). By virtue of law, rights and obligations of the previous Avast Software s.r.o. company passed on its successor – the Complainant. Therefore, it is not an obstacle to this Complainant that the Complainant has not yet been registered as an owner of Indian national trademark No. 1827321.
The Complainant distributes its products i.a. via its website www.avast.com where a customer can find product information and can directly download AVAST software. On this official website (under https://support.avast.com) the Complainant also offers customer support relating to AVAST software.
This dispute concerns the domain name <avastsupporthelpnumber.com> created on July 21, 2018. It follows that the disputed domain name was registered with the knowledge of older above mentioned trademarks of the Complainant. The website under the disputed domain name is supposed to be used by the Respondent to offer paid service concerning the Complainant’s AVAST software to the Complainant´s customers. The provided services are specified under the disputed domain name as follows: “It is given below the mentioned list: Installation issue, Uninstallation issue, Scanning and removal of virus, Trojan house and other suspicious threat, The avast antivirus cannot be downloaded, There might be avast activation error message, The performance of your pc will slow down, You are not able to upgrade the latest version, Some other unspecified error and faults.”
The disputed domain name <avastsupporthelpnumber.com> is confusingly similar to the Complainant’s family of AVAST trade and service marks (both statutory and common law), the Respondent has no rights or legitimate interests in respect of the <avastsupporthelpnumber.com> domain name which has been registered and is being used in bad faith.
A. The disputed domain name is confusingly similar to the Complainant´s trademarks
Word “AVAST” is at the core of Complainant’s family of marks. It has no specific meaning in modern English. Due to long history of the Complainant, large number of the customers and its commercial activities, the Complainant’s trademarks are highly distinctive and the AVAST trademark is a globally known brand with reputation selling on the 7th rank among antivirus software globally.
Based on a large number of the users of the Complainant´s solution, it can be assumed that the word “AVAST” is automatically connected with the Complainant by an ordinary customer.
The disputed domain name registered by the Respondent is confusingly similar to the Complainant´s registered trademarks.
“AVAST” is the distinctive part in the disputed domain name. It is the first dominant part to which an attention of the public is concentrated. An additional parts “-support-” “-help-” and “-number-“ are descriptive in nature meaning providing help to the customers over the telephone. These words are very often used by any producer of products or provider of services in order to repair, maintain, update, install etc. product or service. Therefore, this additional parts are not able to change overall impression and does not eliminate the confusing similarity with the older trademarks of the Complainant and this is even more true in a situation where Complainant itself provide customer support under its official website <support.avast.com>.
Moreover, the Respondent contributes to the confusion of the public by placing the trademark “AVAST” and logo of the Complainant on the websites available under disputed domain name and by imitating trade dress of the Complainant (Respondent uses orange colour which is very typical for the Complainant and its AVAST product) presumably in order to abuse this very famous trademark, logo and Complainant´s good reputation in his favour.
B. The Respondent has no right or legitimate interests in respect of the disputed domain name
No evidence suggests that the Respondent has been commonly known within the consumers by the disputed domain name or by the distinctive part “AVAST” included in the disputed domain name before the beginning of this dispute nor ownership of any identical or similar trademark nor use of any identical or similar brand by the Respondent before the registration of the disputed domain name. The Complainant did not grant any license or authorization to register or use the disputed domain name by the Respondent.
The use of the Complainant’s logo and trademark under the disputed domain name in the absence of Complainant’s authorization represents illegal unauthorized conduct of the Respondent (copyright and trademark infringement).
Before the dispute the Respondent did not use the disputed domain name or a name corresponding to the disputed domain name in connection with a bona fide offering of goods or services because he has not provided the trademarked service but has used the trademark to bait Internet users and then switch them to his competing service.
Respondent intentionally tries to make impression of cooperation with the Complainant. The Respondent placed the Complainant´s trademark (in same cases also logo) on every page of the website and mimics trade dress of the Complainant using orange colour. Furthermore, after description of the service on the main page, the Respondent states official website, telephone number and seat of the Complainant what falsely implies that the service is provided by the Complainant or with its authorization.
The relationship with the Complainant is only indicated in the disclaimer placed at the bottom of the pages in small letters stating that: “We are a third party tech support service provider offering online remote tech support for third party products. Any use of brand names, third party trademarks, products and services is only referential purposes only. Thereby, we disclaim any sponsorship, association or endorsement of or by any third-parties. If your product comes under warranty, the support service is also available free from the manufacturer.“ However, such disclaimer might not be entirely legible for the average Internet users and will barely get into their attention given that it is depicted at the bottom of the website. The average Internet user will not notice the disclaimer as it usually not read and analyse every page before contacting the Respondent and ordering the service.
C. The disputed domain name has been registered and is being used in bad faith
There is no indication that the disputed domain name was registered and is used in bona fide. The Respondent was clearly aware of the registration and the use of the Complainant´s trademarks before the registration of the disputed domain name as follows from the Respondent´s explicit references on its website to the Complainant’s trademark, AVAST Antivirus software, logo, official website, telephone number and seat.
Furthermore, the disputed domain name is used by the Respondent to reach the Complainant´s customers and offer them the identical (and therefore competing) service as is offered by the Complainant on its website and by the Complainant´s official partners. This could suggest (incorrectly) that the Respondent operates as an affiliate or a partner of the Complainant. This is supported by the Respondent´s statement on the website that the service is provided by the “professional team” what in the context of the disputed website and used logo gives misleading impression that the Respondent is certified by Complainant to provide the service. The quality of the service provided by the Respondent is not under the Complainant´s control and therefore such service can very easily harm good reputation built by the Complainant for years. It follows that under the Complainant´s trademark the Responded promotes competitive service and thus intentionally damages the Complainant.
Factors finding in favor of the conclusion that the disputed domain name has been registered and is being used in bad faith are mainly similarity between the Complainant’s official website and the website under the disputed domain name (in particular, use of trade dress of the Complainant), the content of the website, including references to Complainant’s trademark, AVAST software, official site, telephone number, seat and reputation of the Complainant which prove clear indication that the Respondent was aware of Complainant, its business and marks .
The Respondent uses the Complainant´s trademark solely for the commercial gain to misleadingly divert the Complainant´s consumers and to tarnish the trademarks at issue by creating the likelihood of confusion with the Complainant´s marks. The circumstances indicate that the Respondent is using the disputed domain name in a way which has confused or is likely to confuse people or business into believing that the domain name is registered to, operated or authorised by, or otherwise connected with the Complainant.
Furthermore, the use of a proxy service by the true owner hidden behind the Respondent is often by itself an indicator of bad faith.
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