Gambia 

What we offer

Register your domain with us and benefit from the following perks

Landing page

When purchasing your domain, Inventa offers you a simple webpage, where you can briefly present your company and leave your contact details.

High-security DNS servers

In order to ensure our clients that nothing ever fails or gets lost, we work with high-speed network connections in redundant servers (Europe, United States).

Advanced Control Panel

You also get access to a Domain Control Panel to be found in our customer area, allowing you to manage/consult your websites and email accounts.

Support that actually helps

All of our accounts include services of a dedicated account manager. Get your domain now and start profiting from all these advantages, or contact us to learn more about our domain services.

Why choose us

We look at domains from a different perspective

While most of the domain industry sees domains from a commodity perspective, Inventa looks at them as assets for your brand. We offer domain services which include not only hosting, but also the resources you need to protect and expand your business online.

Cut the red tape

We manage your domains at a global scale

We are used to work with domain extensions that have special requirements. We handle the red tape so you don't have to.

Our team of experts will also be ready to help you with the configuration details and will gladly work with your IT Department (and/or outsourced services), to make sure the services you need are quickly implemented according to the best industry practices.

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Latest news

OPINION

Gambia ratifies the Banjul Protocol

Gambia in West Africa is home to the capital city in which the African Regional Intellectual Property Organisation’s (ARIPO) Administrative Council first adopted the Banjul Protocol in 1993. Under ARIPO’s regional system, applicants are required to designate the member states for which their trademark protection is intended. The associated costs of the procedure depend on the number of designated states in each application.  On 3 May Gambia joined the Banjul Protocol, bringing the number of member states to 12 (joining ARIPO, Botswana (joined 2003), Eswatini (1997), Lesotho (1999), Liberia (2010), Malawi (1997), Namibia (2004), Sao Tome and Principe (2016), Tanzania (1999), Uganda (2000) and Zimbabwe (1997)). The government deposited its instrument of ratification with the ARIPO director general on the same day. In accordance with Section 11:3 of the protocol, it will enter into force three months after the deposit of the instrument of ratification, which means that from 3 August 2021 Gambia will be eligible for designation by applicants under the protocol. The documents required for trademark registration in ARIPO include: power of attorney, simply signed; applicant data; sample of the mark (not required for word marks); and a list of goods and/or services. Further, the registration procedure in ARIPO is as follows: A request is filed through the Banjul Protocol at ARIPO or at a member state’s trademark office. A formal examination is conducted by the office where the application is lodged, and a filling date is attributed. The office informs the other offices of the filing. If applicable, national offices have 12 months to inform ARIPO that the registration will have no effect in its territory. ARIPO then accepts the application and publishes a notice of acceptance in the Official Journal. There is a three-month opposition period. The registration certificate is issued and published. Trademarks in ARIPO are valid for 10 years from the filing date and may be consecutively renewed for the same period. It can be extremely beneficial to file applications through ARIPO due the efficiency of the process and because it may result in reduced charges (when compared to filing in each national office). However, this of course depends on the specific case and all these jurisdictions have national offices where applications can be filed through the national route.   This is a co-published article, which was originally published in the World Trademark Review (WTR).

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