Generic terms – those that describe a general class of goods or services – are not eligible for trademark protection. Firms have historically gone to great lengths to prevent their trademarks from becoming generic – a fate often referred to as genericide. But in a few rare cases, firms have voluntarily declared certain terms that they have created to be generic, a phenomenon that I refer to as “sui-genericide”. This article explores the little-discussed phenomenon of sui-genericide, both its origins in government-sponsored programs of the mid-twentieth century and its most recent incarnation in the area of technical interoperability standards. Though the voluntary relinquishment of the exclusive rights conferred by patents and copyrights ha...
A new international trademark jurisprudence is currently in formation that has negative impact on in...
Three appellate decisions illustrate the difficulty of acquiring trademark protection for domain nam...
Abstract – The widely disseminated use of a brand name is commonly regarded by marketing specialists...
Generic terms – those that describe a general class of goods or services – are not eligible for trad...
Recent lawsuits and articles have drawn attention to a growing issue in intellectual property law, t...
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...
The Problem of Genericide in Trademarks article by Michelle Fabio quotes Mark McKenna in Legalzoom, ...
The third edition of Webster’s International Dictionary, first published in 1961, represented a nove...
Trademark genericization is a threat to companies with well-known products or services. Past cases h...
The third edition of Webster’s International Dictionary, first published in 1961, represented a nove...
This article focuses on the FTC\u27s authority under section 14 of the Lanham Act to petition for th...
This article compares the approaches which different federal courts have adopted to address the dist...
It is a fundamental principle of U.S. trademark law that to serve as a trademark, a word or phrase m...
This article discusses the transformation of a distinctive trade sign into a generic term. Any disti...
A new international trademark jurisprudence is currently in formation that has negative impact on in...
Three appellate decisions illustrate the difficulty of acquiring trademark protection for domain nam...
Abstract – The widely disseminated use of a brand name is commonly regarded by marketing specialists...
Generic terms – those that describe a general class of goods or services – are not eligible for trad...
Recent lawsuits and articles have drawn attention to a growing issue in intellectual property law, t...
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...
The Problem of Genericide in Trademarks article by Michelle Fabio quotes Mark McKenna in Legalzoom, ...
The third edition of Webster’s International Dictionary, first published in 1961, represented a nove...
Trademark genericization is a threat to companies with well-known products or services. Past cases h...
The third edition of Webster’s International Dictionary, first published in 1961, represented a nove...
This article focuses on the FTC\u27s authority under section 14 of the Lanham Act to petition for th...
This article compares the approaches which different federal courts have adopted to address the dist...
It is a fundamental principle of U.S. trademark law that to serve as a trademark, a word or phrase m...
This article discusses the transformation of a distinctive trade sign into a generic term. Any disti...
A new international trademark jurisprudence is currently in formation that has negative impact on in...
Three appellate decisions illustrate the difficulty of acquiring trademark protection for domain nam...
Abstract – The widely disseminated use of a brand name is commonly regarded by marketing specialists...