General Terms and Conditions (GTC) of pathways digital SL for the dommy.click platform
Preamble
pathways digital SL, C/ Gremi de Sabaters 21, 07009 Palma, Spain, tax identification number (NIF/CIF): ESB13641428 (hereinafter “Provider” or “dommy.click”), operates the platform at https://dommy.click for the trade, brokerage, rental, and leasing of internet domains.
Section 1 Scope and contracting parties
(1) These General Terms and Conditions (GTC) apply to all contracts concluded between the Provider and the Customer via the dommy.click platform or otherwise in connection with the services offered there. (2) B2B only: The Provider’s offer is expressly and exclusively directed at entrepreneurs, legal entities under public law, or special funds under public law. Consumers are excluded from using the offer. By submitting an offer or concluding a contract, the Customer confirms that they are acting in the course of their trade, business, or profession and hold a valid VAT identification number. (3) Deviating, conflicting, or supplementary terms and conditions of the Customer shall only become part of the contract if the Provider has expressly agreed to their validity in writing.
Section 2 Subject matter of the contract
The Provider renders various services relating to internet domains on the dommy.click platform. The specific subject matter of the contract follows from the respective agreement and essentially comprises:
Sale from own stock: The definitive sale of domains owned by the Provider.
Domain brokerage: The brokerage of purchase contracts for domains between the Customer and third-party domain holders.
Domain rental: The time-limited grant of technical use of a domain in return for recurring remuneration.
Domain leasing: The time-limited grant of use of a domain in return for recurring remuneration, with an option or obligation to transfer ownership after all contractual instalments have been fulfilled.
Section 3 Formation of the contract
(1) A contract may be concluded in two ways: (a) Direct purchase (fixed price): The presentation of domains on the website constitutes a binding offer by the Provider. The Customer accepts that offer by completing the order process and successfully completing payment via the payment service provider (Mollie). (b) Negotiation (“Make Offer”): The Customer may submit a non-binding price offer or inquiry via the platform. If the parties reach an agreement after negotiation, the Provider sends the Customer a payment link (via Mollie). By successfully completing payment through that link, the Customer accepts the Provider’s binding offer, and the contract is formed.
(2) Immediately after formation of the contract and successful receipt of payment, the Provider initiates the contractually agreed steps (e.g. domain transfer).
Section 4 Prices, taxes, and payment terms
(1) All prices quoted are net prices. As these are B2B transactions within or outside the EU, the reverse-charge mechanism generally applies. The Customer is obliged to provide a valid VAT ID and to account for VAT in their country of establishment. If Spanish VAT should apply in an individual case, it will be shown separately. (2) Payment is made in advance via the payment service provider “Mollie” integrated into the platform (e.g. credit card, iDEAL, SEPA, etc.). (3) Entitlement to transfer (auth code) or use of the domain arises only after full, irrevocable receipt of payment by the Provider.
Section 5 Domain sale (own stock) and transfer
(1) In a sale, the Provider transfers ownership of the respective domain to the Customer (change of holder / owner change). (2) Once the purchase price has been received in full by the Provider, the Provider provides the Customer with the transfer code (auth code / EPP code) and unlocks the domain for transfer where required by the respective top-level domain (TLD). (3) The Customer is obliged to initiate the transfer (move to their own registrar) without undue delay. Any transfer costs charged by the Customer’s registrar shall be borne by the Customer. (4) If the transfer fails due to lack of cooperation on the part of the Customer (e.g. incorrect handle data), the Customer remains obliged to pay. Refunds are excluded.
Section 6 Domain brokerage (marketplace)
(1) Where the Provider offers domains on behalf of third parties, the Provider acts solely as an intermediary. The purchase contract for the domain is then concluded exclusively between the third party (seller) and the Customer (buyer). (2) In that case the Provider is not liable for performance of the contract between buyer and seller and does not warrant that the seller actually has power of disposal over the domain. (3) Payments for brokered domains are held by the Provider in a fiduciary capacity (or via escrow) until the transfer has been successfully initiated, unless otherwise agreed.
Section 7 Domain rental and leasing
(1) Rental: In domain rental, ownership of the domain remains with the Provider. For the duration of the rental agreement, the Customer receives the exclusive right to use the domain technically (e.g. by setting the Customer’s nameservers or DNS records). (2) Leasing: For domain leasing, the rental provisions apply accordingly. After expiry of the agreed leasing term and full payment of all leasing instalments, ownership of the domain passes to the Customer by provision of the auth code. (3) Default in payment: If the Customer defaults on an agreed instalment under rental or leasing, the Provider may, after a reasonable grace period, revoke DNS delegation (suspension of domain use). In the event of default exceeding 30 days, the Provider reserves the right to terminate the contract without notice and to exploit the domain otherwise. Instalments already paid under leasing shall in that case be forfeited as compensation for expense and usage fees.
Section 8 Third-party rights / trademark review
(1) No warranty regarding trademark rights: The Provider does not warrant for any domain (whether from own stock or in brokerage, rental, or leasing) that it is free of third-party rights (in particular trademark, name, or copyright). (2) Customer’s duty to review: It is solely the Customer’s responsibility to verify before any purchase, rental, or leasing of a domain whether the domain name infringes third-party rights or violates applicable law. (3) Indemnity: The Customer shall indemnify the Provider against all third-party claims arising from registration, acquisition, or use of the domain by the Customer (in particular in respect of trademark infringement). This includes reasonable costs of legal defence.
Section 9 Liability
(1) The Provider shall be liable without limitation for intent and gross negligence. (2) For ordinary negligence, the Provider shall be liable—except in the case of injury to life, body, or health—only if material contractual obligations (cardinal obligations) are breached. Liability in that case is limited to typical, foreseeable damage, up to a maximum of the amount of the respective domain purchase price or annual rent. (3) The Provider shall not be liable for server outages, technical issues at the respective registrar (e.g. ICANN, DENIC), or faults in the global DNS system that delay or prevent transfer or use of the domain.
Section 10 Retention of title
Domains remain in the unrestricted legal and economic ownership of the Provider until all claims under the respective contract have been paid in full and finally.
Section 11 Applicable law and venue
(1) Contracts between the Provider and the Customer shall be governed exclusively by the law of the Kingdom of Spain, excluding the UN Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG). (2) Exclusive venue for all disputes arising out of or in connection with this contract shall be the Provider’s place of business in Spain, as the Customer is necessarily a merchant or entrepreneur.
Section 12 Severability
Should individual provisions of these GTC be or become invalid or unenforceable, or become invalid or unenforceable after conclusion of the contract, the validity of the remainder of the contract shall remain unaffected. The invalid or unenforceable provision shall be replaced by a valid and enforceable provision whose economic effect comes closest to that which the parties intended with the invalid or unenforceable provision.
Effective: April 2026
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