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Can you afford to lose your domain name? What happens to your business if your website and emails suddenly go down because you’ve lost it? For many businesses, that would be a disaster. For some, it could spell financial ruin, especially if the new owner wants money – a lot of it – to sell the name back to you.
We discuss a recent adjudication decision where exactly that happened to a domain name owner through the automated business model known as “domain drop catching”. What exactly is that and how does it work? How easy or difficult is it to get your domain name back if you lose it?
Read on for more …
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If you plan to form a new family trust, you need to know about a new directive from the Chief Master of the High Court to all Master’s Offices in the country.
It sets out the parameters and requirements for the appointment of an “independent trustee” in addition to the trustees you nominate.
Read up on this before you finalise your plans for a trust, and take advice in doubt.
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Buy-to-let property can be an excellent investment.
Just take into account the possible difficulty, cost and delay of evicting a defaulting tenant – or indeed any unlawful occupier - who refuses to budge. It’s an entirely manageable risk if you take steps to do so upfront, and if you have factored it into your initial calculations.
A recent Constitutional Court decision shows how the risk for landlords has increased, and how, particularly when homelessness could result from an eviction order, you may have to prepare for a longer haul in the courts than you perhaps anticipated.
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