Trademark enforcement
The wider defence of the brand, of which domain recovery is one part.
Trademark enforcementA cybersquatter trading on your brand online is doing in the domain system what an infringer does in the market, and you can usually recover the domain without going to court. UDRP for the generic domains, the WIPO procedure for .ch and .li: both are faster and cheaper than litigation where the registration is genuinely abusive. But not every domain using your name is recoverable, and a failed complaint is money for nothing. We assess the case honestly, run the recovery by the proportionate route, and tell you when buying or leaving it is the smarter answer.
Faster and cheaper than court, where bad faith is clear.
An abusively registered domain can usually be recovered without court: the UDRP for generic domains, the WIPO procedure for .ch and .li. Both turn on bad faith, and not every domain using your name qualifies. We confirm the right, assess whether the registration is genuinely abusive, and run the proportionate route, or advise negotiation where that serves better.
Domain recovery sits within trademark enforcement, rests on a registered mark, and protects the brand held in an IP holding company.
The right procedure depends on the domain (generic or Swiss/Liechtenstein) and all of them turn on showing the registration is genuinely abusive.
| Route | Where it applies |
|---|---|
| UDRP | .com, .net, .org and other gTLDs |
| .ch / .li procedure | Swiss and Liechtenstein domains, via WIPO |
| Negotiation / purchase | Where recovery is uncertain or disproportionate |
| Court | Damages or complex cases the procedures don’t fit |
Each turns on the same question: is the registration genuinely abusive, or does the registrant have a legitimate interest? Getting that assessment right, before filing, is what separates a recovered domain from a failed complaint.
Confirm the right, assess the abuse, choose the route, and run the recovery.
Establishing your trademark right, which the whole recovery depends on.
Testing whether the registration is genuinely in bad faith, or the registrant has a legitimate interest.
UDRP, the .ch/.li procedure, negotiation, or (rarely) court, matched to the domain and the case.
Preparing and filing the complaint, or negotiating the transfer, to get the domain back.
Defensive registration and monitoring, so the next cybersquatter has no target.
A UDRP or .ch/.li complaint has a defined administrative fee plus the cost of preparing the case, modest against the value of recovering a domain that trades on your brand, and far cheaper than litigation. A negotiated purchase costs the price of the domain; court action, where genuinely needed, costs more. Assessing the case first is how we pick the proportionate route.
We scope and quote the recovery. Pricing is on request.
Discuss a domainA domain recovery that succeeds rests on:
The most expensive misunderstanding in domain disputes is assuming any domain containing your brand can be taken. These procedures recover abusive registrations, not every coincidental or legitimate one. A registrant with their own matching name or mark, a genuine descriptive or non-commercial use, or a bona fide business predating your rights is not a cybersquatter, and a complaint against them will fail: money spent for nothing, sometimes with a finding of attempted reverse hijacking. Some disputes are better resolved by negotiation or purchase, and some are not worth pursuing at all. We assess the merits honestly before filing and tell you when a case will lose, rather than running it regardless.
Assessing the case honestly, running the recovery by the proportionate route, and saying when to negotiate or leave it, rather than filing regardless, is the work this firm does.
We test bad faith and legitimate interest before filing, because a failed UDRP is money spent for nothing, sometimes with a hijacking finding against you.
The procedure matched to the domain, or a negotiated purchase where recovery is uncertain or disproportionate to the domain’s value.
Domain recovery handled within the wider defence of the brand, with defensive registration and monitoring to deny the next cybersquatter a target.
The wider defence of the brand, of which domain recovery is one part.
Trademark enforcementThe registered right that a domain recovery depends on.
Swiss trademark registrationThe structure that holds the brand the domains trade on.
IP holding companyTell us the domain. A partner assesses whether it is abusive and runs the recovery by the proportionate route, or advises when to negotiate instead.