If it is a .au domain
auDRP

.au Dispute Resolution Policy (auDRP) (2002-22)

The purpose of the auDRP is to provide a cheaper, speedier alternative to 
litigation for the resolution of disputes between the registrant of a .au 
domain name and a party with competing rights in the domain name.

The auDRP commenced on 1 August 2002 for asn.au, com.au, id.au, net.au and 
org.au domain names. On 19 June 2003 the auDRP was extended to cover edu.au 
domain names.

The auDRP is an adaptation of the Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP) 
administered by ICANN with respect to the global Top Level Domains (gTLDs).

The auDRP was drafted by auDA's Dispute Resolution Working Group.
How to Lodge an auDRP Complaint

<http://www.auda.org.au/audrp/audrp/>
david wrote:
Offer to buy it from them :(

Do you have a trade mark for the domain? or failing that a registered business name? Is it .au? Australian domains used to be better protected, but I'm not sure if that's as true as it once was. If it's a foreign tld I wish you luck.

Richard Hayes wrote:
Dear list,

I have an expired domain and some else has registered it. How do I recover the domain?

regards,

Richard Hayes



--
Marghanita da Cruz
http://ramin.com.au
Tel: 0414-869202


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