Difference between revisions of ".goo"

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# [[Google]] ([[Charleston Road Registry Inc.]])
 
# [[Google]] ([[Charleston Road Registry Inc.]])
 
# [[NTT Resonant Inc.]]<ref>[http://newgtlds.icann.org/en/program-status/application-results/strings-1200utc-13jun12-en Reveal Day 13 June 2012 – New gTLD Applied-For Strings]</ref>
 
# [[NTT Resonant Inc.]]<ref>[http://newgtlds.icann.org/en/program-status/application-results/strings-1200utc-13jun12-en Reveal Day 13 June 2012 – New gTLD Applied-For Strings]</ref>
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===Objection===
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An official Legal Rights Objection was filed by the applicant [[NTT Resonant Inc.]] against fellow applicant [[Google]].<ref>[http://www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/lro/cases/ LRO Cases, WIPO.int]</ref>
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A Legal Rights Objection, as defined by the ICANN approved mediator, [[WIPO]], is when, "third parties may file a formal objection to an application on several grounds, including, for trademark owners and Intergovernmental Organizations (IGOs) [..] When such an objection is filed, an independent panel (comprised of one or three experts) will determine whether the applicant’s potential use of the applied-for gTLD would be likely to infringe [..] the objector’s existing trademark, or IGO name or acronym."<ref>[http://www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/lro/ LRO, WIPO.int] Retrieved 25 March 2013</ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 16:59, 25 March 2013

Status: Proposed
Registry: NTT Resonant Inc.
Registry Backend: GMO Registry
Type: Brand TLD
Priority #: 347 - NTT Resonant Inc.
1814 - Google (Charleston Road Registry Inc.)

More information: NTLDStatsLogo.png

.goo is a Brand TLD being proposed in ICANN's New gTLD Program.

Current Applicants

  1. Google (Charleston Road Registry Inc.)
  2. NTT Resonant Inc.[1]

Objection

An official Legal Rights Objection was filed by the applicant NTT Resonant Inc. against fellow applicant Google.[2]

A Legal Rights Objection, as defined by the ICANN approved mediator, WIPO, is when, "third parties may file a formal objection to an application on several grounds, including, for trademark owners and Intergovernmental Organizations (IGOs) [..] When such an objection is filed, an independent panel (comprised of one or three experts) will determine whether the applicant’s potential use of the applied-for gTLD would be likely to infringe [..] the objector’s existing trademark, or IGO name or acronym."[3]

References