Milosch Krubi, a domain entrepreneur from Hungary, has been investing in domain names since August of 1999. In that sense, he’s an experienced, seasoned domainer.
But even experienced domainers with years of domain investing registrations can expect to fail – if they don’t seek attorney assistance.
“I get UDRP and I laugh, because Complainant register trademark 8 year after domain,” says Milosch Krubi in a heavy eastern European accent.
“So file response, wait panel decide and put note: it’s reverse domain name hijack,” adds Krubi.
What happened next is probably unheard of by most domainers: the Complainant filed for a reverse Reverse Domain Name Hijacking (rRDNH) – also known in the legal circles as a “finger in the butt” move.
“Have lawyer no, who needs, but know Internet and domain from study UDRP case on DNW.com every day,” says Krubi. “Nowhere find rRDNH mean, so I said pfffft, error maybe of typo writer.” adds Krubi.
The little known rRDNH filing by the Complainant is a process that involves the new Unreasonably Rapid Suspension form, coded as FU-5150 by ICANN. It extends the powers of the Complainant and produces instant results, unless the Respondent’s reply arrives within 8 hours.
“Ridiculos, I know not 8 hour frame window for reply, who does that?” asks Milosch Krubi, visibly dejected. “I lost domain because asshole ICANN say I cannot sleep 10 hour after trip so Complainant win with rRDNH. Baszd meg, ICANN!” says Krubi, emphatically.
Both the rRDNH process and its assorted form, FU-5150, are newly introduced weapons in the hands of unscrupulous Complainants, that would otherwise make it to Rick Schwartz’s shitlist of reverse domain name hijackers.
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LOL. Great one!