Labrocca, I have to disagree with you here. It is a good decision because the panelist did what they were supposed to.
"In the present case, the Panel is not convinced either that the Respondent knew about the Complainant’s BEACHES Marks when it registered the disputed domain name. More specifically, the Panel is not satisfied that the Respondent had in mind the Complainant then – the Respondent is domiciled in Canada, where the Complainant claims neither business activities nor trademark rights. The Panel is well aware that the Respondent has foregone the opportunity to explain its motives in the present case, and the Panel believes that generally such behavior may give rise to inferences in this regard. Even so, in the absence of more specific indications in favor of the Complainant’s assertions, the Panel, on balance, finds it more likely than not that the Respondent registered the generic term “beaches” including a typing error in order to attract traffic looking for websites in relation to beach holidays and thus to generate revenue by providing sponsored links. In the present circumstances, insufficient evidence is before the Panel that the Respondent registered the disputed domain name in bad faith. Arguably, the situation may be different if the Respondent’s use would go beyond the generic meaning of the term."
In the true sense of UDRPs, it is to provide relief for TMed names that were registered in bad faith against theTM holder. The panleist did what they were supposed to do. They did not believe that the domain owner registered the domain because of the TM holders TM.
Intel, not answering is the worst thing you can do in UDRPs.