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| Chilling Effects Clearinghouse > Trademark > Notices > Vitamin Manufacturer Claims Trademark Infringement (NoticeID 1762, http://chillingeffects.org/N/1762) | Location: https://www.chillingeffects.org/notice.cgi?NoticeID=1762 |
March 29, 2005
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Sender Information: |
Recipient Information:
[Private]
Blogger [Google, Inc.]
[Private]
[Private], CA, [Private], USA
Sent via: fax
Re:
Attention [Private]., To whom it may concern, ISO-OPC Goods and Services IC 005. US 006 018 044 046 051 052. G & S: Nutritional supplement specifically containing Oligomeric Proanthocyanidins. FIRST USE: 20030221. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20030221 Standard Characters Claimed Mark Drawing Code (4) STANDARD CHARACTER MARK Serial Number 78390395 Filing Date March 25, 2004 Current Filing Basis 1A;1B Original Filing Basis 1A;1B Owner (APPLICANT) [Private] INDIVIDUAL UNITED STATES [Private] [Private] NEW YORK [Private] Type of Mark TRADEMARK Register PRINCIPAL Live/Dead Indicator LIVE The offending url is I have a good faith belief that use of the trademarks described above with the advertisements described above is not authorized by the trademark owner or its agent, nor is such use otherwise permissible under law." It is our hope that you can remedy this situation ASAP. All attempts at communicating with the site owner have been ignored. They even refused the registered and certified letter we sent. Thank you, [Private]
I am [Private], President of Saratoga Supplements based in Saratoga NY. I am writing in reference to our trademark name and image being abused maliciously by a member of blogspot.com. Our e-mail address is [Private]@saratoga-supplements.com and our telephone number is [Private].
Our trademark info is as follows
http://opcblog.blogspot.com
We are concerned with the owner's misuse of our product image and trademark name. She was, for a short time, a retailer of our products and was dismissed for making false claims about our product, ISO-OPC and ISO-Synergy. She is highly ranked on google and when potential clients go to her site, it states that our products are not approved by health Canada. The inference is that our products are up to Canadian approval standards. In point of fact, health Canada would never have any oversight of our product since it is classified as a food supplement. Nor would the FDA. She in fact has no reason to be displaying our products at all, because there is no way for her to obtain them.
I represent that the information in this notification is true and correct and that I am authorized to act on behalf of the trademark owner, myself.
[Private]
Saratoga Supplements
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Question: What are the DMCA Safe Harbor Provisions?
Answer: In 1998, Congress passed the On-Line Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act (OCILLA) in an effort to protect service providers on the Internet from liability for the activities of its users. Codified as section 512 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), this new law exempts on-line service providers that meet the criteria set forth in the safe harbor provisions from claims of copyright infringement made against them that result from the conduct of their customers. These safe harbor provisions are designed to shelter service providers from the infringing activities of their customers. If a service provider qualifies for the safe harbor exemption, only the individual infringing customer are liable for monetary damages; the service provider's network through which they engaged in the alleged activities is not liable. Question: What can be protected as a trademark? Answer: You can protect
Question: What exactly are the rights a trademark owner has? Answer: In the US, trademark rights come from actual use of the mark to label one's services or products or they come from filing an application with the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) that states an intention to use the mark in future commerce. In most foreign countries, trademarks are valid only upon registration. There are two trademark rights: the right to use (or authorize use) and the right to register. The person who establishes priority rights in a mark gains the exclusive right to use it to label or identify their goods or services, and to authorize others to do so. According to the Lanham Act, determining who has priority rights in a mark involves establishing who was the first to use it to identify his/her goods. The PTO determines who has the right to register the mark. Someone who registers a trademark with the intent to use it gains "constructive use" when he/she begins using it, which entitles him/her to nationwide priority in the mark. However, if two users claim ownership of the same mark (or similar marks) at the same time, and neither has registered it, a court must decide who has the right to the mark. The court can issue an injunction (a ruling that requires other people to stop using the mark) or award damages if people other than the owner use the trademark (infringement). Trademark owners do not acquire the exclusive ownership of words. They only obtain the right to use the mark in commerce and to prevent competitors in the same line of goods or services from using a confusingly similar mark. The same word can therefore be trademarked by different producers to label different kinds of goods. Examples are Delta Airlines and Delta Faucets. Owners of famous marks have broader rights to use their marks than do owners of less-well-known marks. They can prevent uses of their marks by others on goods that do not even compete with the famous product. Question: What are the limits of trademark rights? Answer: There are many limits, including:
Question: What are the notice and takedown procedures for web sites?
Answer: In order to have an allegedly infringing web site removed from a service provider's network, or to have access to an allegedly infringing website disabled, the copyright owner must provide notice to the service provider with the following information:
Once notice is given to the service provider, or in circumstances where the service provider discovers the infringing material itself, it is required to expeditiously remove, or disable access to, the material. The safe harbor provisions do not require the service provider to notify the individual responsible for the allegedly infringing material before it has been removed, but they do require notification after the material is removed. Question: What are the notice and takedown procedures for web sites?
Answer: In order to have an allegedly infringing web site removed from a service provider's network, or to have access to an allegedly infringing website disabled, the copyright owner must provide notice to the service provider with the following information:
Once notice is given to the service provider, or in circumstances where the service provider discovers the infringing material itself, it is required to expeditiously remove, or disable access to, the material. The safe harbor provisions do not require the service provider to notify the individual responsible for the allegedly infringing material before it has been removed, but they do require notification after the material is removed. Question: What are the counter-notice and put-back procedures?
Answer: In order to ensure that copyright owners do not wrongly insist on the removal of materials that actually do not infringe their copyrights, the safe harbor provisions require service providers to notify the subscribers if their materials have been removed and to provide them with an opportunity to send a written notice to the service provider stating that the material has been wrongly removed. [512(g)] If a subscriber provides a proper "counter-notice" claiming that the material does not infringe copyrights, the service provider must then promptly notify the claiming party of the individual's objection. [512(g)(2)] If the copyright owner does not bring a lawsuit in district court within 14 days, the service provider is then required to restore the material to its location on its network. [512(g)(2)(C)] A proper counter-notice must contain the following information:
If it is determined that the copyright holder misrepresented its claim regarding the infringing material, the copyright holder then becomes liable to the person harmed for any damages that resulted from the improper removal of the material. [512(f)] See also How do I file a DMCA counter-notice?, and the counter-notification generator. |
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