The Problem of Genericide in Trademarks article by Michelle Fabio quotes Mark McKenna in Legalzoom, September 2012. University of Notre Dame Law Professor Mark P. McKenna notes that leading up to the Google lawsuit, there have been “a few cases [regarding genericide], but most of them are quite old, and courts tend to be very reluctant to declare that a mark has become generic.” The risk of genericide for the everyday trademark owner is likely fairly low. It is also “way overstated by trademark owners who want to shut down another use but want to shield themselves from bad public relations of doing so,” according to McKenna
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
Modern scholarship takes a decidedly negative view of trademark law. Commentators rail against doctr...
During September 2010, Google decided to change their trade mark policy to allow keywords which is e...
The Problem of Genericide in Trademarks article by Michelle Fabio quotes Mark McKenna in Legalzoom, ...
Recent lawsuits and articles have drawn attention to a growing issue in intellectual property law, t...
A trademark is created when a new meaning is added to an existing word or when a new word is invente...
Trademark genericization is a threat to companies with well-known products or services. Past cases h...
Generic terms – those that describe a general class of goods or services – are not eligible for trad...
Legal systems that enforce exclusive rights to words claimed as trademarks face two common problems:...
This article anticipates doctrinal disorder in domain name disputes as a result of the new generic t...
In trademark law, genericide (the process in which a proper trademark has transformed through public...
This paper demonstrates how problematic convergences between Internet technology, the demands of a b...
“Companies spend billions to promote their brand. But with increased trademark recognition comes the...
This article focuses on the FTC\u27s authority under section 14 of the Lanham Act to petition for th...
This article discusses Mark McKenna’s Testing Modern Trademark Law’s Theory of Harm as an important ...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
Modern scholarship takes a decidedly negative view of trademark law. Commentators rail against doctr...
During September 2010, Google decided to change their trade mark policy to allow keywords which is e...
The Problem of Genericide in Trademarks article by Michelle Fabio quotes Mark McKenna in Legalzoom, ...
Recent lawsuits and articles have drawn attention to a growing issue in intellectual property law, t...
A trademark is created when a new meaning is added to an existing word or when a new word is invente...
Trademark genericization is a threat to companies with well-known products or services. Past cases h...
Generic terms – those that describe a general class of goods or services – are not eligible for trad...
Legal systems that enforce exclusive rights to words claimed as trademarks face two common problems:...
This article anticipates doctrinal disorder in domain name disputes as a result of the new generic t...
In trademark law, genericide (the process in which a proper trademark has transformed through public...
This paper demonstrates how problematic convergences between Internet technology, the demands of a b...
“Companies spend billions to promote their brand. But with increased trademark recognition comes the...
This article focuses on the FTC\u27s authority under section 14 of the Lanham Act to petition for th...
This article discusses Mark McKenna’s Testing Modern Trademark Law’s Theory of Harm as an important ...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
Modern scholarship takes a decidedly negative view of trademark law. Commentators rail against doctr...
During September 2010, Google decided to change their trade mark policy to allow keywords which is e...