Legal systems that enforce exclusive rights to words claimed as trademarks face two common problems: the trademark may degenerate into a generic word for the product, and a manufacturer may try to restrict a generic product name from the public domain by various means. Difficult questions must be confronted when the trademark claimant seeks to enforce the generic word. The authors compare the approaches that have been taken by the United States and four Commonwealth countries, all of which have evolved very different common-law and statutory solutions. The Article concludes that although there are shortcomings in American law, they are insignificant when compared with the state of the law in the foreign nations
This article aims to answer two questions: should business competitors be allowed to use each other’...
This paper demonstrates how problematic convergences between Internet technology, the demands of a b...
This paper seeks to identify the differences and similarities in trademark laws in six countries: Un...
Legal systems that enforce exclusive rights to words claimed as trademarks face two common problems:...
A trademark is created when a new meaning is added to an existing word or when a new word is invente...
Generic terms – those that describe a general class of goods or services – are not eligible for trad...
Trade in goods and services has historically resisted territorial confinement, but trademark protect...
This article anticipates doctrinal disorder in domain name disputes as a result of the new generic t...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that trademark law traditionally sought to protect con...
The Problem of Genericide in Trademarks article by Michelle Fabio quotes Mark McKenna in Legalzoom, ...
What’s in a word? As it turns out, quite a lot. The vast majority of words in our language, includin...
This article compares the approaches which different federal courts have adopted to address the dist...
We generally think about trademark law as a branch of intellectual property law. Because trademark l...
Part I begins the inquiry by describing trademark’s connection with other consumer information laws....
Abstract – The widely disseminated use of a brand name is commonly regarded by marketing specialists...
This article aims to answer two questions: should business competitors be allowed to use each other’...
This paper demonstrates how problematic convergences between Internet technology, the demands of a b...
This paper seeks to identify the differences and similarities in trademark laws in six countries: Un...
Legal systems that enforce exclusive rights to words claimed as trademarks face two common problems:...
A trademark is created when a new meaning is added to an existing word or when a new word is invente...
Generic terms – those that describe a general class of goods or services – are not eligible for trad...
Trade in goods and services has historically resisted territorial confinement, but trademark protect...
This article anticipates doctrinal disorder in domain name disputes as a result of the new generic t...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that trademark law traditionally sought to protect con...
The Problem of Genericide in Trademarks article by Michelle Fabio quotes Mark McKenna in Legalzoom, ...
What’s in a word? As it turns out, quite a lot. The vast majority of words in our language, includin...
This article compares the approaches which different federal courts have adopted to address the dist...
We generally think about trademark law as a branch of intellectual property law. Because trademark l...
Part I begins the inquiry by describing trademark’s connection with other consumer information laws....
Abstract – The widely disseminated use of a brand name is commonly regarded by marketing specialists...
This article aims to answer two questions: should business competitors be allowed to use each other’...
This paper demonstrates how problematic convergences between Internet technology, the demands of a b...
This paper seeks to identify the differences and similarities in trademark laws in six countries: Un...