Re. Norman's comment, if you search a well-known auction site for 'actinic' you get a load of lightbulbs for aquariums. So it's a generic word with a principle meaning that has nothing to do with ecommerce software. It's also in Wiki as a medical term.
However, if a domain name seeks to latch on to a known product/service/company offering some service related to that company's offerings, that could be dodgy - but then, who is going to type in the url incorrectly (so it's NOT seeking to deceive) to that extent. So it must be there to promote services which genuinely seek to support users of the original product.
I give you www.actinicplugins.co.uk which as the owner says
so is probably OK.
Therefore I contend that actinicstuff is perfectly acceptable for use by someone offering additional services related to the core offering, and not provided by the core offerer.
On the other hand, I have had a dispute with my ownership of a domain that was just one letter different from a competitor - changing a generic word to a plural, as often voiced by customers - came to blows. They should have thought of the connotation - they did with co.uk, but not .com.
My view is that actinicstuff is significantly different - but you might not get away with say, actinix, actinik, if the domain were offering an alternative, but related, product. Then again it could be offering lightbulbs or skin lotions, & that would be OK, as punters would not be deceived.
However, if a domain name seeks to latch on to a known product/service/company offering some service related to that company's offerings, that could be dodgy - but then, who is going to type in the url incorrectly (so it's NOT seeking to deceive) to that extent. So it must be there to promote services which genuinely seek to support users of the original product.
I give you www.actinicplugins.co.uk which as the owner says
You have to have permission from Actinic to use Actinic on your eCommerce related website
Therefore I contend that actinicstuff is perfectly acceptable for use by someone offering additional services related to the core offering, and not provided by the core offerer.
On the other hand, I have had a dispute with my ownership of a domain that was just one letter different from a competitor - changing a generic word to a plural, as often voiced by customers - came to blows. They should have thought of the connotation - they did with co.uk, but not .com.
My view is that actinicstuff is significantly different - but you might not get away with say, actinix, actinik, if the domain were offering an alternative, but related, product. Then again it could be offering lightbulbs or skin lotions, & that would be OK, as punters would not be deceived.
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