The high court refused to interfere with the decision of an arbitrator ruling in favour of Google and transferred the domain name Googlee.In to the Internet major.
It also took a dig at the man for filing an appeal against the arbitrator's decision, saying that perhaps it was wrong 'Googlee' by him in adopting the domain name Googlee.In.
"Is a 'Googlee' a wrong one? A cricket enthusiast will say, 'Yes of course'. In the virtual world too, the answer is well, yes, petitioner Gulshan Khatri found to his consternation, when he used it as a domain name:'googlee.In'," Justice S Muralidhar said.
Interestingly, Justice Muralidhar in his judgment has put a screenshot of the home page of googlee.In to substantiate the claim of the parties and did not find any merit in the petitioner's submission that 'Googlee.In' was not similar to 'Google'.
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"The domain name and mark 'google' is a coined word, distinctive in nature, particularly in relation to the goods and services that it represents. The adoption by Khatri of a nearly identical mark/domain name 'googlee.In' is indeed in bad faith and not merely a coincidence.
The court said that the petitioner was rightly stopped in his tracks by the arbitrator from continuing with his "misadventure".
"He could not have hoped to get away with exploiting Google's goodwill and reputation by merely adding an 'e' to its domain name. Google rightly cried foul. The arbitrator declared Khatri out... Khatri stands bowled by his own 'googlee'," the judge added.
In 2007, Khatri applied to the .IN Registry, run by National Internet Exchange of India (NIXI) to register the domain name of his website, googlee.In. Before opening .IN domain names for registration to the general public, NIXI began with a sunrise period, during which trademark holders are allowed to register domain names which are similar to their own. Khatri got his domain name registered in 2008 and in 2010, it was renewed up till 2020.
After their legal notices to Khatri failed to get any reply, Google filed a complaint against him under the .IN Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (INDRP).
Following which, the arbitrator held in favour of Google, since Khatri had offered no shot, failing to offer any explanation for the fact that his website was virtually identical to Google's, hence, the cancellation of googlee.In was directed.