Warning:
By registering a domain name ending in .uk (with some very
limited exceptions), you enter into a contract of registration with
us (Nominet UK) on the following conditions, which includes
conditions limiting our liability and relating to our use of your
personal information. This contract is just for the domain name and
separate to any arrangement you may have with any other organisation
for providing internet services. For an explanation of the meaning
of the endings of .uk names, see the rules on our website at
www.nominet.org.uk
We are a not-for-profit company limited by guarantee, generally
performing these services on a cost-recovery basis, and we cannot
investigate what rights you have to register or use the domain name.
So, we think it is reasonable for us to limit our liability in
certain respects so that we may continue to offer our services in
the interests of the whole internet community.
This contract includes the DRS policy, the DRS procedure and the
rules. You can get copies of these from our website or from us.
Other policies we refer to do not form part of this contract and may
change at any time.
Definitions
1 The following
words marked in bold will have specific meanings in this contract.
‘agent' – Someone who may act on your behalf to deal with us,
which will be shown in the WHOIS. Only certain people qualify, and
they are known as ‘tag-holders’. See our website for a list.
‘cancel’ – Cancelling this contract and your domain name are the
same thing. The contract ends. The domain name will be deleted, will
no longer work as part of a website or e-mail, and will be released
to be registered again under our rules.
‘consumer' – You are a consumer if you are an individual not
registering, using or planning to use the domain name as part of a
business, trade or profession.
‘correct’ – This means that the information must be good enough
to allow us to contact you quickly at any reasonable time without
having to get information from anywhere else, must not be deceptive,
and (if possible for that type of information) must clearly identify
you. For your name this also means that the information must be
detailed enough that we can tell exactly who you are (in legal
terms, exactly which legal entity we have this contract with).
‘domain name’ – An internet domain name ending in .uk and under
one of the second level domains (such as .co.uk, .me.uk or .org.uk)
operated by us.
‘DRS policy’, ‘DRS procedure’ – The policy and procedure of our
dispute resolution service.
‘EEA’ – The European Economic Area, which includes most European
countries. Countries outside the EEA may not have strict laws to
protect personal information.
‘name servers’ – Computers that provide specific translation
information in the domain name system.
‘notify’ – Serving notice to you, your agent, authorised
representative, contact (see condition 5.5) or us (see condition
36).
‘personal data’ – Any information about an identifiable living
person (for example, your name, address or phone number).
‘PRSS’ – A service provided under strict contract to some people
based in the EEA which allows them to search WHOIS data differently,
but not to use it for marketing purposes.
‘register’ – Our record of domain names and details about you,
your agent (if you have one) and other information we need.
‘registry’ – The single organisation which holds all records for
domain names with the same ending (we run ‘.uk’) and operates the
name servers for that domain.
‘rules’ – Our rules which explain which domain names can be
registered and which cannot.
‘special status’ – Various special states your domain name may be
in, such as suspended or ‘detagged’. See our website for details.
This will normally mean that you will remain listed as the person
who has registered the domain name but the domain name itself will
not work, and may mean that other actions with the domain name are
blocked.
‘WHOIS’ – A system which provides public information about domain
names. See our website for details and how to use the WHOIS.
2 Also in this
contract, the following words have special meanings but will not be
put in bold.
‘conditions’ – includes all parts of the contract, not just those
that lawyers call conditions.
‘we’, ‘us’, ‘our’ – Nominet UK (company number 3203859). See
condition 35.
‘you’, ‘your’ - The person who is entering into this contract
with us and who the domain name will be registered for.
What we will do
3 We are the
registry for the .uk domain and we will carry out the general duties
that we believe (after wide consultation) a modern, neutral and
not-for-profit .uk registry should.
This includes (among other things):
3.1
processing your application to register or renew a domain name in
the light of our rules, and your right (see condition 20) to renew;
3.2
maintaining overall ownership, control and responsibility for the
register;
3.3
if we are listed as your agent or if it would be inappropriate for
you to ask your agent to act (see condition 5) making changes to the
register at your request or providing information about the .uk
domain name system;
3.4
if the domain name is not in a special status, entering details
about the domain name into our name servers; and
3.5
publishing procedures for you to renew the domain name and for
recording a transfer, surrender or change of agent for the domain
name.
What you must do
4 You have
various responsibilities set out generally in this contract. You
must also:
4.1
give and keep us notified of your correct name, postal address and
any phone, fax or e-mail information and those of your contacts (if
you appoint any, see condition 5.2). This duty includes responding
quickly and correctly to any request from us to confirm or correct
the information on the register;
4.2
notify us at once about any court proceedings which involve the
domain name; and
4.3
notify us of the details of name servers for the domain name which
you are allowed to use and which respond promptly and correctly
about the domain name at all reasonable times.
Agents, representatives and security
5 For the security of your domain name we have the following
procedures to try to make sure that our instructions come from you
or someone allowed to act on your behalf.
5.1 We do not have to take any
action, or make any change to the register, until we are satisfied
that we have received a valid request from the right person.
5.2 You will help us with our
security checks, provide any identification or documentary evidence
we reasonably ask for, and allow us to keep copies of those
documents for our files.
5.3 If you have an identifier (for
example, a password, a token, personal information or a code) to use
with us or our systems, you must keep it secret and safe because we
will be allowed to assume that any action done or asked for using
that identifier or a product of it was done or asked for by you or
by someone authorised to act for you. We will be entitled to enforce
procedures for dealing with lost, cancelled or insecure identifiers.
5.4 >Your agent acts on your behalf
in registering and maintaining the registration of the domain name
so that, unless the matter relates to something covered by condition
5.6 below, any communication to or from your agent is taken as being
to or from you. You should always contact your agent first with any
request or question about your domain name or changes to it, as we
will only act if we are satisfied that your agent cannot or will
not. Be aware that your agent may be entitled to discounts on our
fees so it may be cheaper for you to go through them.
5.5 We may also specify other types
of authorised representative or contact whose instructions we will
accept in certain cases, what types of instructions they can give
us, and whether they can take your place if we need to notify you.
If you notify us that you want someone to represent you, you are
giving them power to act and us power to act on their instructions
and (if this applies) notify them instead of or as well as you.
5.6 We will publish on our website
from time to time certain activities which your agent is not allowed
to do on your behalf or where we want to deal with you directly (or
both).
Fees and payment
6 We are a
not-for-profit organisation so our fees (see our website) reflect
the cost of the work we do. To make sure that every person who
registers a domain name pays their fair share of the costs of
running the central registry, we:
6.1
may make a charge for any of the services we provide under this
contract, as long as (where only we can provide the service) we
believe the fee is set at a not-for-profit cost-recovery level only;
6.2
do not have to start any process, including any change to the
register, until we (not just your agent) have received (within any
time limit) any fee for that action and any other fees that have not
been paid for the domain name or things done with it – it is your
duty to make sure that we are paid and that there is enough
information with the payment to make sure that we know which domain
name it relates to;
6.3
may cancel the domain name without further notice if any debt
relating to the domain name remains unpaid after the deadline we
have set; and
unless condition 24 or 34 applies, or we have made a significant
mistake, will not provide credit notes or refunds.
Your promises and indemnity
7 By entering
into this contract you promise that:
7.1
you (or your agent) have the permission of any person whose personal
data is to be held on the register in line with condition 11;
7.2
any identity and contact information you (either yourself or through
your agent) send us must be correct;
7.3
you will send us the information needed under condition 7.2 as soon
as possible, through your agent if possible, and you will keep them
up to date
7.4
by registering or using the domain name in any way, you will not
infringe the intellectual property rights (for example, trademarks)
of anyone else;
7.5
you are entitled to register the domain name; and
7.6
you have not registered the domain name in a way that fails to meet
with any legal duty you have.
8 Unless you are
a consumer, you will pay us (including the current or past members
of our Board of Directors) any and all reasonable costs, claims and
expenses (whether direct or indirect) arising out of any claim that
you have broken any of the promises in condition 7.
9 Our right to
rely on the promises in condition 7 and indemnity in condition 8
will continue to be available after the domain name has been
registered and will not be affected by the cancellation or transfer
of the domain name.
Nature of domain names and the register
10 A domain name is not an item of
property and has no ‘owner’. It is an entry on our register database
reflected by our nameservers which we provide as part of this
contract. As a result:
10.1
we will not be bound by, or record on the register, any
mortgage-related obligations;
10.2
we own and keep all copyright and database rights in the register;
and
10.3
you should not rely on the registration or continued registration of
the domain name until we confirm that any application you make has
completed and you confirm that your correct name is recorded in the
register for the domain name.
Personal data
11 We will make your personal data
available in the following ways, but not release it for any other
purpose to any other person. We may:
11.1
include it on the register;
11.2
include it on the WHOIS (which is also available outside the EEA)
and PRSS. For these purposes we will publish your name and (unless
you are a consumer and choose to opt out) your address, but not your
phone or fax number or e-mail address;
11.3
if they ask in writing, give your personal data to people with a
legitimate reason for asking for it (based on the exemptions in the
Data Protection Act 1998 or similar laws that replace or follow it),
including government or law enforcement agencies;
11.4
give your personal data to your current or proposed agent (or both);
and
11.5
use it as set out in the DRS policy and DRS procedure.
12 You may write to us to ask for a copy
of the personal data we hold about you, or you can look at the WHOIS,
or you can ask your agent. Please note that if, at any point, we
discover that you are not a consumer, we may automatically cancel
your opt-out (see condition 11.2) without notifying you.
13 By registering a domain name you agree
to us using your personal data as explained in conditions 11 and 12.
The dispute resolution service
14 You agree to be bound by:
14.1
the DRS policy and DRS procedure; and
14.2
if there is a dispute, the version of the DRS policy and DRS
procedure (available on our website) which applies at the time that
proceedings under the dispute resolution service start, until the
dispute is over.
15 We (including in this case our
directors, officers, staff of all types and any expert) will not:
15.1
be liable to you or anyone else for anything done or not done in
connection with any proceedings under the dispute resolution
service, unless the act or lack of action is shown to have been in
bad faith; and
15.2
be asked or forced to reveal information or materials which we
gained as a result of the informal mediation stage of the dispute
resolution service, unless ordered by a court with relevant
jurisdiction.
Cancelling or altering the domain name
16 We may cancel or put the domain name
into a special status by notifying you if:
16.1
we receive independent proof that you have provided significantly
inaccurate, not correct, unreliable or false contact details
(including names), failed to keep your contact details up to date,
or failed to give us those details at all;
16.2
you have broken any part of condition 7 or 8;
16.3
the domain name is being used in a way that is likely to endanger
any part of the domain name system or our systems and internet
connections; or
16.4
you have broken any of the conditions (including the rules, DRS
policy and DRS procedure) and (in the case of a matter which it is
possible to put right and which is not covered by condition 6.3,
16.1 to 16.3 or 17) you do not put it right within 30 days of us
notifying you.
17 We may (but do not have to) transfer,
cancel, alter or amend the domain name, put it in a special status
or prevent its renewal:
17.1
on your instructions (including the absence of instructions to renew
- see condition 20), or by someone apparently acting for you (see
condition 5);
17.2
if we reasonably believe that the contact details on the register
for you are so inaccurate or false that we would not be able to
notify you of the change;
17.3
if we reasonably believe that the changes to update the register or
to correct any error, ambiguity or inaccuracy relating to the domain
name registration (including any error in making the domain name
available for registration or an error in a previous cancellation of
the domain name) would make it more accurate;
17.4
if you withdraw your permission to having your personal data
displayed on the WHOIS or PRSS (not including cases where a consumer
is using the opt-out);
17.5
to carry out the decision an expert has made under our dispute
resolution service; or
17.6
if we receive a complete and valid court order which we or you (or
both) must obey, or if not making the changes the court orders would
be a contempt of court by us or you.
18 If you are an individual, this
contract will end if you die and the person legally appointed to
deal with your assets after you die does not transfer the domain
name (either to themselves or someone else) within a year of your
death (or the end of their appointment, whichever comes first).
19 If you are not an individual, this
contract will end if you complete a liquidation or disbandment
process or otherwise no longer exist, even if (where possible) you
are later restored by an official or court order or decision.
Duration, renewal and transfer
20 Unless ended earlier under this
contract, we will enter your domain name on the register for two
years. If we receive your renewal request and fee in the standard
format by the deadline we set, and in line with the conditions of
this contract generally, you will have the right to enter into a new
contract with us on the same standard conditions that we are then
offering to people registering new domain names. The specific
procedure which applies to renewals is set out on our website, or
you can ask your agent.
21 We may transfer our rights and
responsibilities under this contract to anyone else.
22 If you want to transfer your domain
name to someone else, you must, as well as any general requirements
in this contract:
22.1 use our current published
transfer process; and
22.2 make sure that the person
taking over the domain name accepts what remains of this contract in
full.
23 If you do not transfer your domain
name (as needed by condition 22) there will be no valid transfer of
this contract and domain name, and no document or agreement
attempting or claiming to transfer the domain name or this contract
(or both) will have any effect.
24 If you are a consumer, you may have a
right to cancel this contract under the Consumer Protection
(Distance Selling) Regulations 2000 or similar laws amending or
replacing it. The right must be claimed within seven working days of
the start of the services (which include security-check work). If
this happens, we will cancel this domain name and provide you or
your agent (depending on who paid us) a full refund within 30 days.
If we pay your agent, you may still have to get a refund from them.
Exclusions and limitations of liability
25 Please note the explanation about
liability at the beginning of this contract. However, nothing in
these terms limits or excludes our liability for fraudulent
misrepresentation or death or personal injury caused by our
negligence.
26 By registering the domain name, we are
not acknowledging that you have any rights in any words within the
domain name, and we are not authorising you to use the domain name
as part of a business.
27 We will not be liable to you whether
under contract law, the legal rules about duties to other people
(known as the law of ‘tort’) including negligence or otherwise, for:
27.1 any loss of profit, revenue or
other type of economic loss (whether direct or indirect);
27.2 loss of business or contracts;
27.3 loss of expected savings or
goodwill; or
27.4 any losses which a court
categorises as ‘consequential’, or ‘indirect’ arising out of or in
connection with the contract, including but not limited to:
27.4.1 any mistake or missing
information in the register; and
27.4.2 loss of registration or use,
or both (for whatever reason and whether temporary or otherwise), of
the domain name.
28 The law normally implies terms into
contracts, but you and we agree that, as far as the law allows, they
do not apply to this contract.
29 Our total liability to you, whether
under these conditions or otherwise (including liability for
negligence), will be no more than £5,000.
30 If you are a consumer, conditions 27,
28 and 29 do not apply to you. Your statutory rights are not
affected - for information contact your local authority Trading
Standards . Department or your citizens advice bureau.
31 Conditions 11.1, 18, 19 and 25 to 39
will continue to apply after this contract has ended, even if that
happens because we or you end this contract wrongfully.
General
32 If a court rules that any of these
conditions is not valid or cannot be enforced, the other conditions
will continue to be valid and enforceable.
33 This contract does not give you any
legal rights against other people who have registered .uk domain
names or give other people rights against us for any reason.
34 The internet is constantly changing
and developing. As a result of this, we reserve the right to make
reasonable changes to the terms of this contract (including the DRS
policy, DRS procedure and rules) at any time during the term of the
contract. We will only do so when we have good reason. Unless we are
acting because of a legal requirement or a court order, the change
will only be made after we have consulted publicly. We will publish
a notice in advance (ideally, 30 days in advance) on our website and
provide a link from the main page. The changes will apply from the
date shown in the notice. You should visit our website regularly to
find out about any changes. If you do not agree with any change to
the conditions, you may notify us that you want to end the contract
in at least 30 days’ time. In this case, we will give you a
proportionate refund of the registration for the remaining period.
35 Our address is Nominet UK, Sandford
Gate, Sandy Lane West, Oxford, OX4 6LB, England (phone +44(0)1865
332211, fax +44(0)1865 332299, e-mail: nominet@nominet.org.uk. Our
offices are open from 9am to 5.30pm (UK local time) Monday to
Friday, except for public holidays.
36 Except as set out in condition 5.4, or
in the DRS policy and DRS procedure, any notice to be given under
the contract will:
36.1 be considered to have been
served if hand-delivered, or sent by prepaid post, fax or e-mail, to
you, your agent or representative (see condition 5.5) at any postal
or e-mail address or fax number on the appropriate register entry
(if to us, at any of the addresses above); and
36.2 apply from the date it was
delivered, or if not delivered the date it was sent or posted.
37 This contract is a legally binding
document. You should read it carefully and make sure that it
contains everything you want and nothing you are not prepared to
agree to. These conditions, together with the rules, DRS policy and
DRS procedure, are the entire contract between you and us for the
domain name, and replace all previous contracts, understandings and
representations about this domain name, whether spoken or written.
38 We deal with a large number of domain
names and we rely on you or other people to tell us about any
changes to your personal information or status. This means that
sometimes we continue to list a domain name or accept instructions
even after this contract has ended, or should have been ended.
Nothing we do, or do not do, during that period stops the contract
from ending, stops us from ending it, or acts to create a new
contract.
39 This contract is made under the law of
England and any court proceedings must be in the English courts. If
you are a consumer in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland, we will
accept your local law and courts. Enforcement of a court order may
be done in any law or court system that is relevant.