Using a Trade Mark to meet the Australian Presence requirement
To be eligible to hold any name in the .au ccTLD you must first meet the Australian Presence requirement. One of the ways you can meet the Australian Presence requirement is by holding an Australian Trade Mark (including a pending Trade Mark application) that appears on IP Australia’s Trade Mark database. This method is often used by foreign business entities to meet the eligibility criteria for com.au or net.au domain names. Previously for the com.au and net.au namespaces, if you were using an Australian Trade Mark as the basis for meeting the Australian presence requirement, you could choose a name that was ‘closely and substantially connected’ to your Trade Mark. In the new licensing rules for the com.au namespace if you are using an Australian Trade Mark as the basis for meeting the Australian presence requirement, the name you choose must be an exact match to the words which are the subject matter of the Australian Trade Mark. As described in the definitions of the Licensing Rules an exact match means: “… that the domain name being applied for is identical to the words which are the subject of an Australian Trade Mark. The domain name must include all the words in the order in which they appear in the Australian Trade Mark, excluding:- DNS identifiers such as com.au;
- punctuation marks such as an exclamation point or an apostrophe;
- articles such as ‘a’, ‘the’, ‘and ’or ‘of’; and
- ampersands.”
If your name is not an exact match of the words in the trademark, you will be ineligible to hold that com.au or net.au domain.
• aprettyhorsecarousels.com.au
• prettyhorsecarousels.net.au But not:
• phc.com.au
• Carousels.net.au
• Aprettyhorse.com.au
• horsecarousels.com.au
What you can do if this change affects you
This change affects com.au and net.au registrants who :- use a trademark as the basis for meeting the Australian presence requirement;
- have a name which is not an exact match of their trademark as defined by the new licensing rules.
A: You will not be able to renew your domain, and it will enter the expiry process. Q: What do you do once you’ve verified that your trademark is an exact match to your domain?
A: Nothing, your domain will renew as per normal. Q: What do you do once I’ve registered an ABN that’s related to my domain name?
A: You will need to initiate the Registrant Name Change process (please note that there is a cost associated with this process.) Q: What do you do once you’ve registered a new domain name that’s an exact match to your existing trademark?
A: This will be your new domain name. If there are any services associated with the old domain name, such as emails or a website, these will need to be transferred or redirected over to this new domain name. Our support team may be able to help you with this and can be contacted at webcentral.au/about/support Q: If I register an ABN or new trademark do I need to let anyone know once this is done?
A: No, all you need to do is register a new domain that meets the above eligibility requirements, or perform a Registrant Name Change (outlined above) Q: If I do not meet the new eligibility rules, will someone warn me before my domain expires?
A: Yes, you will receive the standard domain expiry notifications for your domain.