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Domain Name: Nigeria Air, A Case in Point

Published: Monday, September 10, 2018

Domain names are now an integral part of most businesses. The more distinctive a domain name is, the easier it is for people to remember, locate and access it.  Unfortunately, the rather unwholesome practice of registration of domain names by entities or persons other than the legitimate user is quite prevalent. This is not new and it is what led the then President of the United States of America, Mr Bill Clinton to sign the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act into law in 1999. Such registrations are typically up for sale at a premium to the legitimate user and do mislead or confuse unsuspecting visitors to the domain/website if one has been set up.  If the stories in the media are correct, then Nigeria Air is a case in point. So what is to be done?

Fortunately there are preventative, practical and legal measures available and these include:

1.    Register your preferred name as a domain as early as possible;

2.    Register your preferred name in as many top level domain names as possible;

3.    If your preferred name has already been registered, consider variables. For instance in the Nigeria Air case, flynigeriaair. 

Where your preferred name has been registered by persons other than legitimate users, you may

       (a) Buy back the name if affordable/cheap and any evidence of bad faith is minimal or even non-existent

     (b) using the applicable domain name dispute resolution policy such as the WIPO-initiated Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (for top level domain disputes) or the Nigerian Internet Registration Agency Complaints Policy (for disputes relating to the .ng domain space) to challenge and recover the name and

      (c) If it can be established that the seller or person who registered the domain name is based in Nigeria, then further to the provisions of the Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention, etc.) Act, 2015, a complaint may be made to the Nigerian Police regarding the offence of cybersquatting. Where the Nigerian Police is able to establish a breach/offence, criminal proceedings can commence against the perpetrator before the Federal High Court.

It is pertinent to note that prior to 2015, Nigeria did not have any specific law that dealt with cybercrimes. Though long overdue (as stated earlier a similar law in the United States was passed in 1999), the Act was a major step towards combatting the scourge of cyber squatters, amongst other things. The Act itself is undergoing a review and we will share updates and developments as they become available.

Sandra Oyewole
Olajide Oyewole LLP (A member of DLA Piper Africa)
Country:
Nigeria
Practice Area:
Patents
Phone Number:
+234 1 279 3674
Fax:
N/A
Olajide Oyewole LLP was established in 1964 and is one of the largest firms in sub-Saharan Africa. Our firm has provided efficient services that are adaptive and tailor-made for our clients. We get straight to the point of the commercial challenges faced by our clients and make it our business to understand their industry, their everyday concerns and their future goals. The Firm aims to deliver an incomparable client experience, and our clients interact with the very best lawyers, who have some of the finest legal minds in the industry, who also possess a refreshingly creative and resourceful approach to work. Olajide Oyewole LLP recently become a member of the DLA Piper Africa Group. DLA Piper is ranked as the world’s number one law firm according to Who’s Who 2016 and Merger Market League Tables. It has also been ranked as the number one “game changer” for the past ten years by the Financial Times. As general counsel, Sandra provides legal services on a multitude of issues to various sectors and industries. In the first 8 years of Sandra’s career, she acquired significant dispute resolution experience at all levels of Nigeria’s judicial system. With the development of her analytical, oratory and drafting skills, Sandra joined Olajide Oyewole and Co.(as it was then named) in 2001 as a partner where she guided the growth of the Firm’s practices in advertising, brand protection, broadcasting, employment, entertainment, estate planning, hospitality, immigration, information technology, intellectual property, media and sports. Sandra has in depth knowledge of Nigeria’s creative and innovative industries, regularly structuring deals and providing legal and regulatory advice. Sandra is often invited to speak at seminars and workshops in and outside Nigeria on matters pertaining to chain of title, intellectual property and Nigeria’s creative industry. She has a number of articles published and is committed to the strengthening of Nigeria’s anti-piracy and intellectual property laws and policies.

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