Paragraph (4)(a) of the Policy lists three elements that the Complainant must prove to merit a finding that the disputed domain name registered by the Respondent be transferred to the Complainant:
1) the disputed domain name is identical or confusingly similar to a trademark or service mark ("mark") in which the Complainant has rights; and
2) the Respondent has no rights or legitimate interests in respect of the disputed domain name; and
3) the disputed domain name has been registered and is being used in bad faith.
The Panel is satisfied that the Complainant has satisfied all three elements for the principal reasons set out below.
RIGHTS IN AN IDENTICAL OR CONFUSINGLY SIMILAR TRADEMARK
As mentioned above the Complainant asserts it has several trademark registrations consisting of the word BOURSORAMA. At least one of these registrations predates the registration date of the disputed domain name approximately 20 years.
To satisfy paragraph 4(a)(i) of the Policy it is enough that the Panel is satisfied that the Complainant has registered rights in a trademark that predates the registration of the disputed domain name in a single jurisdiction (even if that single jurisdiction is not one in which the Respondent resides or operates) (Koninklijke KPN N.V. v. Telepathy, Inc D2001-0217 (WIPO May 7, 2001); see also WIPO Case Nos. D2012-0141 and D2011-1436). The Complainant has clearly satisfied such in relation to the trademark BOURSORAMA. In fact, the EU trademark registration evidenced in the Complaint covers the Respondent's home jurisdiction of Italy.
The next question is whether the dispute domain name is confusingly similar to BOURSORAMA.
The Panel disregards the gTLD suffix ".com" for the purpose of this comparison. However the Panel further notes that if such a suffix were to add anything it would only make the disputed domain name more similar to the Complainant's well used <boursorama.com> domain name, which has the same suffix.
Further the Panel finds that in circumstances where the Complainant is based in France and clearly has a reputation in the BOURSORAMA trademark in that country the inclusion of the prefix "fr" does not diminish the likelihood of confusion as it is likely to be viewed as falsely indicating a connection with the Complainant's business in the France. Given the global nature of the internet and the fact that persons communicating online are unable to verify each others physical locations other than from information they see or hear on their computers or devices it is likely for internet users to see some elements of domain names that allude to locations, countries or jurisdictions (like "FR" or "EU") as indicating geographic origin. This is indeed the purpose of country code top level domains. Likewise the inclusion of a geographic indicator in a domain name prior to the ".com" gTLD suffix, including at the beginning of the domain name, may serve the same purpose and be unlikely to reduce the confusion caused by the additional inclusion of the trademark in the domain name. The Panel refers to the decisions in Disney Enterprises Inc v. Orients Rugs & More /NA, Claim No. FA1404001555495 (FORUM, May 21, 2014) and Donald J. Trump v. Web-adviso, D2010-2220 (WIPO, March 5, 2011).
The disputed domain name is confusingly similar to the BOURSORAMA trademark.
NO RIGHTS OR LEGITIMATE INTERESTS
The Respondent's name bears no resemblance to the disputed domain name. Further, the website to which the disputed domain name resolves has no content which would indicate that the Respondent has any right or legitimate interest in the disputed domain name.
The Respondent has no rights or interests in the disputed domain name.
BAD FAITH
The Complainant asserts that the incorporation of a famous mark into a domain name coupled with holding of an inactive website is evidence of bad faith. The Panel notes that in the present matter the Respondent has only held the domain name for less than two months. It is perfectly foreseeable that a domain name holder may take a reasonable amount of time that is more than two months to actively use a domain name. Hence for the purposes of assessing the issue of bad faith the Panel places no weight on the fact that domain name resolves to an inactive website.
However what is also clear to the Panel is there is no foreseeable reason why the Respondent, residing in a European Union country, would choose a domain name containing this unique French trade mark together with the letters "FR" which indicate the country France (particularly given it is the letters used for French ccTLD's). On its face the composition of this domain name indicates that the Respondent knew of the said trademark before seeking to register the domain name. Further, there is no response from the Respondent to contradict this inference that the Panel draws under Rule 14(b) and (5)(a) of the UDRP Rules.
The Panel also notes that although normally the configuring of an MX record in absence of any other facts would not indicate bad faith, in the circumstances of the present case mentioned in the preceding paragraph such configuration is concerning. The domain name registrant would only configure the MX record for a domain name if it intended to use that domain name for emailing. That is the sole purpose of such configuration. All indications are that the Respondent intended to send emails in which it pretended to be the Complainant. This is of very serious concern when the Complainant uses its similar trademark in relation to online banking. And it is a relevant consideration for the Panel to observe this fact in relation to use of well-known financial services trademarks.
The apparent high risk of the first steps in attempted online fraud cannot be discounted and the disputed domain name has clearly been registered in bad faith.
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