Trademarks Final Flashcards
SLEEKCRAFT FACTORS
- Strength of the trademark
- Proximity of the goods/services (related? direct competition?)
- Similarity of the trademarks
- Evidence of actual confusion
- Marketing channels used
- Customer degree of care
- Intent of defendant (attempt to confuse)
- Likelihood of market expansion
- Similarity of the trademarks (sleekcraft)
Are there actual similarities between the trademarks: sight, sound, and meaning.
Look to:
1. Overall impression created by the respective designations including respective goods or services or in identifying respective business
2. pronunciation of designations
3. Translation of foreign words in the designations
4. Verbal translation of any pictures or designs
5. Suggestions, connotations, and meanings of the designations
- Strength of the trademark (sleekcraft)
Has the senior trademark established strength in the market? Is it fanciful, arbitrary, suggestive or descriptive?
- Proximity of the goods/services (sleekcraft)
Are the trademarks in use on competing products? Are the products related but not in direct competition?
- Evidence of actual confusion (sleekcraft)
Does evidence exist that consumers have actually confused the products?
- Marketing channels used (sleekcraft)
Do the products share similar channels of trade? Courts could even take into account each products’ placement in stores.
- Customer degree of care (sleekcraft)
How much caution do ordinary consumers exercise in making purchasing decisions?
Courts frequently use the price of goods as a proxy for the level of prudence a buyer will use in any given case.
- Intent of defendant (sleekcraft)
Does is appear that the alleged infringer was trying to create a likelihood of confusion?
- Likelihood of market expansion (sleekcraft)
Could the brands in question expand into overlapping markets? An eventual expansion could create new competition and result in consumer confusion.
Strength or Distinctiveness of Trademark
- Generic
- Descriptive
- Suggestive
- Arbitrary
- Fanciful
Generic and Descriptive are Not Distinctive
Suggestive, Arbitrary, and Fanciful terms are Inherently Distinctive
When you use your surname, it is likely descriptive
Descriptive trademarks
A descriptive term generally is not trademarkable unless it has achieved a secondary meaning in the market.
Domain names
A domain name that consists of a generic word plus .com is generic and thus unregistrable as a trademark only if consumers generally perceive the domain name as generic.
Therefore, a domain name consisting of a generic word plus .com is not unregistrable as a trademark per se, and whether such a domain name is registrable depends largely on public perception
Could be compound word like booking.com though
Genericide
the process by which a brand name loses its distinctive identity as a result of being used to refer to any product or service of its kind.
Seabrook foods test: A non-word or symbol mark is inherently distinctive if it is:
(1) an uncommon shape or design,
(2) unique in the industry,
(3) not just an adaptation of a commonly-used ornament for a class of goods, or
(4) commercially significant even if considered separately from any accompanying words.
Generic term test
“Who are you/what are you” test for generic terms
Real determination: primary significance of the word in a consumer’s mind
Mark answers “who are you/what are you/where do you come from/who vouches for you”
whereas generic term only answers “what are you”
Factors for if mark is descriptive
- the dictionary definition; (dictionary test)
- whether the term conveys the characteristics of the product through simple observation, rather than exercise of the imagination (imagination test);
- whether competitors are likely to need to use the term to describe their own, similar product;
- and whether competitors actually do use the term to describe their own product.
Unregistered marks
An unregistered mark is entitled to protection under the Lanham Act if it would qualify for registration as a trademark.
To qualify for registration a mark must be sufficiently “distinctive” to distinguish the registrant’s goods from those of others. Such distinctiveness may be demonstrated in either of two ways. The mark may be: (1) “inherently distinctive” if its intrinsic nature serves to identify its particular source. (2) the mark may be distinctive by virtue of having acquired a “secondary meaning” in the minds of consumers.
Crowded field means
even if Abercrombie test finds it inherently distinctive, other sources do use it too commonly
Trade dress
total image and overall appearance
Test to find Secondary meaning
- Length and manner of use of mark or trade dress
- Volume of sales
- Amount and manner of advertising
- Nature of use of the mark or trade dress in newspapers and magazines
- Consumer survey evidence
- Direct consumer testimony
- Defendant’s intent in copying the trade dress.
Colors and trademark
Color marks can be inherently distinctive when used on product packaging, depending upon the character of the color design. Inherent distinctiveness turns on whether consumers would be predisposed to equate the color feature with the source. While it is true that color is usually perceived as ornamentation, a distinct color-based product packaging mark can indicate the source of the goods to a consumer, and, therefore, can be inherently distinctive.
Confusion of source of goods
The Lanham Act permits a civil action against any person who uses any word, term, name, symbol, or device in connection with any goods or services in a manner which is likely to cause confusion as to the source of those goods or services.
Functional and Trade Dress
a feature is functional if it is useful for a purpose other than identifying the source of a product. Functionality is evaluated by looking at the usefulness of a specific design feature itself, such as a particular product’s shape or size, and not by assessing the usefulness of the product as a whole or the usefulness of the design feature in general.
(ie. Pocky stick design = useful, not protected)
aesthetic functionality
Having aesthetic functionality disqualifies the mark from trademark protection. The test for aesthetic functionality is:
whether protecting the aesthetic feature would impose a significant competitive disadvantage on anyone who cannot use the functional feature. However, the competitive disadvantage must be unrelated to the recognition or reputation of the trademark owner.