This Article explains why federal courts should not defer to United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) trademark decisions. Under United States trademark law, actual use of a mark on specific goods or services is required to support federal trademark registration. The USPTO processes a tremendous volume of applications to register trademarks. In order to do so expeditiously, trademark examiners use heuristics drawn from past USPTO registration data. While markets continually change, each trademark registration is updated at five or ten-year renewal intervals. Accordingly, much of the data does not reflect current market use. A recent audit established that many federal trademark registrations would be cancelled if their factual foun...
The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit delivered only seven precedential tradema...
Federal and state law recognizes multiple forms of intellectual property, including patents,1 copyri...
The Federal Trademark Dilution Act ( FTDA ) has failed to protect, in the manner intended by Congres...
This Article explains why federal courts should not defer to United States Patent and Trademark Offi...
Trademarks are valuable economic rights. Businesses around the world use trademark status to guard t...
Federal trademark-registration rights have grown in import, and trademark owners have taken notice. ...
Courts have traditionally deferred to the American Rule presumption against awarding attorney’s fees...
In 2014, the Patent and Trademark Office (“Trademark Office” or “Agency”) made national headlines wh...
Trademark law has de-evolved. It has transitioned from an efficient mechanism for ensuring competiti...
The intellectual property community is buzzing about a recent decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals ...
On June 19, 2017, the Supreme Court sent shockwaves through the bedrock of trademark law with its de...
The typical shorthand justification for trademark rights centers on avoiding consumer confusion. But...
This Article argues that consumer confusion plays a pervasive and important role in our trademark sy...
However, the most important part of the [Rescuecom Corp. v. Google, Inc.] opinion was not the decisi...
Most trademark applicants and the attorneys who counsel them are familiar with the requirement that ...
The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit delivered only seven precedential tradema...
Federal and state law recognizes multiple forms of intellectual property, including patents,1 copyri...
The Federal Trademark Dilution Act ( FTDA ) has failed to protect, in the manner intended by Congres...
This Article explains why federal courts should not defer to United States Patent and Trademark Offi...
Trademarks are valuable economic rights. Businesses around the world use trademark status to guard t...
Federal trademark-registration rights have grown in import, and trademark owners have taken notice. ...
Courts have traditionally deferred to the American Rule presumption against awarding attorney’s fees...
In 2014, the Patent and Trademark Office (“Trademark Office” or “Agency”) made national headlines wh...
Trademark law has de-evolved. It has transitioned from an efficient mechanism for ensuring competiti...
The intellectual property community is buzzing about a recent decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals ...
On June 19, 2017, the Supreme Court sent shockwaves through the bedrock of trademark law with its de...
The typical shorthand justification for trademark rights centers on avoiding consumer confusion. But...
This Article argues that consumer confusion plays a pervasive and important role in our trademark sy...
However, the most important part of the [Rescuecom Corp. v. Google, Inc.] opinion was not the decisi...
Most trademark applicants and the attorneys who counsel them are familiar with the requirement that ...
The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit delivered only seven precedential tradema...
Federal and state law recognizes multiple forms of intellectual property, including patents,1 copyri...
The Federal Trademark Dilution Act ( FTDA ) has failed to protect, in the manner intended by Congres...