A complaint landed on you — defend the name
A good-faith registrant — a dictionary domain, an acronym, a long-held investment — is not a cybersquatter. If a complainant is using the UDRP to take what they could not buy, you can defend the registration and ask the panel to declare reverse domain name hijacking. The response window is tight, so act the week you are notified.
How we defend
UDRP response
We build the record that proves your rights and legitimate interest and rebut the bad-faith case.
- Evidence of good-faith use and prior rights
- Rights / legitimate-interest argument
- Rebuttal of the bad-faith allegations
Reverse hijacking (RDNH)
Where the complaint is abusive, we ask the panel for an RDNH finding — a strong reputational and legal marker.
- Spot the Plan B and renewal-in-bad-faith traps
- Document the abuse of process
- Request the RDNH finding
FAQ
A UDRP complaint was filed against me — how long do I have?
The response window is short, usually about 20 days from notice. Preserve your evidence of good-faith use immediately and get advice the same week.
What does a defense cost?
Respondent defense and RDNH work starts at $3,500 or runs hourly. The complainant pays the forum filing fee, not you.
What is the Plan B trap?
When a complainant fails to buy a domain and then files a UDRP to take it, panels often see abuse — and may issue a reverse domain name hijacking finding.