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[back to notice text] Question: What do these registration numbers mean? or Why don
Answer: Do not be led astray by the registration numbers: trademark rights in the United States arise from use of the mark in commerce, not from registering. However, both state and federal law can provide relief from trademark infringement. If your opponent has registered its mark on the Patent & Trademark Office
[back to notice text] Question: What is a trademark?
Answer: A trademark is a "mark" (word, phrase, symbol, design, mark, device, or combination thereof) used to identify the source of a product. Trademarks allow consumers to evaluate products before purchase.
[back to notice text] Question: What is trademark infringement?
Answer: Although different courts have different tests, the central concept is confusion in the marketplace. The law protects against consumer confusion by ensuring that the marks on the same or similar products or services are sufficiently different. A plaintiff in a trademark infringement case generally must prove 1) it possesses a valid mark; 2) that the defendant used the mark; 3) that the defendant used the mark in commerce, "in connection with the sale, offering for sale, distribution or advertising "of goods and services; and 4) that the defendant used the mark in a manner likely to confuse consumers.
[back to notice text] Question: When is parody protected from a charge of trademark infringement?
Answer: Parody is a usage of a mark that pokes fun at the mark and does not confuse the public as to the source of the usage. In determining whether there is infringement the court balances the public interest in free expression against the public interest in avoiding consumer confusion. "A parody must convey two simultaneous--and contradictory messages; that it is the original, but also that it is not the original and is instead a parody. To the extent that it does only the former but not the latter, it is not only a poor parody but also vulnerable under trademark law, since the consumer will be confused." From Cliffs NOtes, Inc. v. Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, 886 F. 2d 490 (2d Cir. 1989)
[back to notice text] Question: What implication does alleged confusion have on claims of trademark infringement?
Answer:
A mark that is confusingly similar so closely resembles a registered trademark that it is likely to confuse consumers as to the source of the product or service. Consumers could be likely to believe that the product with the confusingly similar mark is produced by the organization that holds the registered mark. Someone who holds a confusingly similar mark benefits from the good will associated with the registered mark and can lure customers to his/her product or service instead. Infringement is determined by whether your mark is confusingly similar to a registered mark. The factors that determine infringement include:
- proof of actual confusion
- strength of the established mark
- proximity of the goods in the marketplace
- similarity of the marks? sound
- appearance and meaning
- how the goods are marketed
- type of product and how discerning the customer is
- intent behind selecting the mark
- likelihood of expansion in the market of the goods
[back to notice text] Question: What is contributory trademark infringement?
Answer: Even if you are not using someone's mark directly in a product or service you sell, your opponent may say you have liability under the theory of "contributory trademark infringement." This liability may exist if you knowingly allow someone else to violate another party's trademark rights and personally gain from such violation. It may also exist if you intentionally encourage another person to violate a trademark. For example, in one case a court found that the operator of a California swap meet was liable for contributory trademark infringement because it was aware that vendors at its swap meet were selling counterfeit recordings that violated the trademark of the company that owned the rights to the recordings. While the swap meet operator did not sell the counterfeit items itself, it profited on the sale of the items by selling booth space to the vendors and collecting an entrance fee from the customers buying the infringing products. In another case the manufacturer of a generic drug was found liable for contributory trademark infringement because it continued to supply the drug to pharmacists it knew were mislabeling the drug with the name of the trademarked medication. However in another case a court felt that a company providing domain name registration, had less control over the use of its service and was not liable for contributory trademark infringement when someone registered a domain name that infringed a trademark. The important issues in determining liability for contributory trademark infringement are if you are aware of the infringement, if you have the ability to monitor and control the use of your product or service, and you are in a position to receive some benefit from the violation.
[back to notice text] Question: What is false designation of origin?
Answer: It covers similar ground to trademark infringement, but is more specific to misrepresentation of source, and applies even when there is no trademark at issue. If your website makes it appear that you sell products made by Company X, but in fact you make these products in your garage, Company X might accuse you of falsely designating the origin of (or "passing off") your items.
[back to notice text] Question: What facts should a C&D include?
Answer: Recitation of Facts. Read this section of the letter carefully. It should contain some or all of the following information: (1) the trademark that is allegedly being infringed; (2) the trademark, domain name or other use that is allegedly doing the infringing; (3) the products and services on which your opponent uses the allegedly infringed mark; (4) the date your opponent commenced such use; and (5) the registration numbers, if the trademarks are registered with the Patent & Trademark Office.
[back to notice text] Question: What is copyright infringement? Are there any defenses?
Answer: Infringement occurs whenever someone who is not the copyright holder (or a licensee of the copyright holder) exercises one of the exclusive rights listed above. The most common defense to an infringement claim is "fair use," a doctrine that allows people to use copyrighted material without permission in certain situations, such as quotations in a book review. To evaluate fair use of copyrighted material, the courts consider four factors: - the purpose and character of the use
- the nature of the copyrighted work
- the amount and substantiality of copying, and
- the market effect.
(17 U.S.C. 107) The most significant factor in this analysis is the fourth, effect on the market. If a copier's use supplants demand for the original work, then it will be very difficult for him or her to claim fair use. On the other hand, if the use does not compete with the original, for example because it is a parody, criticism, or news report, it is more likely to be permitted as "fair use." Trademarks are generally subject to fair use in two situations: First, advertisers and other speakers are allowed to use a competitor's trademark when referring to that competitor's product ("nominative use"). Second, the law protects "fair comment," for instance, in parody.
[back to notice text] Question: What defenses are there to trademark infringement or dilution?
Answer:
Defendants in a trademark infringement or dilution claim can assert
basically two types of affirmative defense: fair use or parody.
Fair use occurs when a descriptive mark is used in
good faith for its primary, rather than secondary (trademark),
meaning, and no consumer confusion is likely to result. So, for
example, a cereal manufacturer may be able to describe its cereal as
consisting of "all bran," without infringing upon Kelloggs' rights in
the mark "All Bran." Such a use is purely descriptive, and does not
invoke the secondary meaning of the mark. Similarly, in one case, a
court held that the defendant's use of "fish fry" to describe a batter
coating for fish was fair use and did not infringe upon the plaintiff's
mark "Fish-Fri." Zatarain's, Inc. v. Oak
Grove Smokehouse, Inc., 698 F.2d 786 (5th Cir. 1983). Such uses are
privileged because they use the terms only in their purely descriptive
sense.
Some courts have recognized a somewhat different, but closely-related,
fair-use defense, called nominative use. Nominative use occurs when use
of a term is necessary for purposes of identifying another producer's
product, not the user's own product. For example, in a recent case, the
newspaper USA Today ran a telephone poll, asking its readers to vote for
their favorite member of the music group New Kids on the Block. The New
Kids on the Block sued USA Today for trademark infringement. The court
held that the use of the trademark "New Kids on the Block" was a
privileged nominative use because: (1) the group was not readily
identifiable without using the mark; (2) USA Today used only so much of
the mark as reasonably necessary to identify it; and (3) there was no
suggestion of endorsement or sponsorship by the group. The basic idea
is that use of a trademark is sometimes necessary to identify and talk
about another party's products and services. When the above conditions
are met, such a use will be privileged. New Kids on the Block v. News America
Publishing, Inc., 971 F.2d 302 (9th Cir. 1992).
Finally, certain parodies of or using trademarks may be permissible if they are not too directly tied to commercial use. The basic idea here is that
artistic and editorial parodies of trademarks serve a valuable critical
function, and that this critical function is entitled to some degree of
First Amendment protection. The courts have adopted different ways of
incorporating such First Amendment interests into the analysis. For
example, some courts have applied the general "likelihood of confusion"
analysis, using the First Amendment as a factor in the analysis. Other
courts have expressly balanced First Amendment considerations against
the degree of likely confusion. Still other courts have held that the
First Amendment effectively trumps trademark law, under certain
circumstances. In general, however, the courts appear to be more
sympathetic to the extent that parodies are less commercial, and less
sympathetic to the extent that parodies involve commercial use of the
mark.
So, for example, a risqu? parody of an L.L. Bean magazine advertisement (L.L. Beam's "Back to School Sex Catalog") was found not to constitute infringement. L.L. Bean, Inc. v. Drake Publishers, Inc., 811
F.2d 26, 28 (1st Cir. 1987). Similarly, the use of a pig-like
character named "Spa'am" in a Muppet movie was found not to violate
Hormel's rights in the trademark "Spam." Hormel Foods Corp. v. Jim Henson Prods., 73
F.3d 497 (2d Cir. 1996). On the other hand, "Gucchie Goo" diaper
bags were found not to be protected under the parody defense, Gucci Shops, Inc. v. R.H. Macy & Co., 446 F.
Supp. 838 (S.D.N.Y. 1977). Similarly, posters bearing the logo
"Enjoy Cocaine" were found to violate the rights of Coca-Cola in the
slogan "Enjoy Coca-Cola", Coca-Cola Co. v. Gemini Rising, Inc., 346 F. Supp. 1183 (E.D.N.Y. 1972). In short -- although the courts recognize a parody defense, the precise contours of that defense are difficult to outline with any precision.
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