The concept of incontestability in American trademark law has caused great confusion ever since its adoption as part of United States trademark law in 1946. This Article is first a study of the rational basis for incontestability in American trademark law. The role of incontestability in the larger regime of American trademark law is established in order to understand incontestability as it fits within the history of the common law of trademarks. This is fundamental in order to understand the significance of the thesis that incontestability is illegitimate. Next, acquisition of incontestability is presented in order to show how simple it is to attain incontestable status and to put in perspective the resulting advantages. This also demonstr...
In the previous entry in this series, I discussed the narrow foundations of trademark law and its mo...
This article, however, takes the view that the basic landscape in trademark law is unlikely to chang...
The adoption of the Federal Trademark Dilution Act (the “FTDA”) in 1995, which incorporated a federa...
The concept of incontestability in American trademark law has caused great confusion ever since its ...
Incontestability is a nearly unique feature of American trademark law, with a unique American implem...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that trademark law traditionally sought to protect con...
The confusion that has accompanied the effort to graft a dilution remedy onto federal trademark law ...
This article argues that trademark infringement and dilution are best understood as commercial behav...
The Federal Trademark Dilution Act ( FTDA ) has failed to protect, in the manner intended by Congres...
In this Intellectual Property Viewpoints series, we tend to focus on copyright and patent law – the ...
This contribution to the annual teaching edition of the Saint Louis University Law Journal encourage...
This article argues for a fundamental shift in the way famous trademarks are protected under America...
The trademark use doctrine plays a critical role in ensuring that trademark law serves its proper pu...
Ever since the creation of federal dilution law, legal commentators have expressed consternation abo...
In the previous entry in this series, I discussed the narrow foundations of trademark law and its mo...
This article, however, takes the view that the basic landscape in trademark law is unlikely to chang...
The adoption of the Federal Trademark Dilution Act (the “FTDA”) in 1995, which incorporated a federa...
The concept of incontestability in American trademark law has caused great confusion ever since its ...
Incontestability is a nearly unique feature of American trademark law, with a unique American implem...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that trademark law traditionally sought to protect con...
The confusion that has accompanied the effort to graft a dilution remedy onto federal trademark law ...
This article argues that trademark infringement and dilution are best understood as commercial behav...
The Federal Trademark Dilution Act ( FTDA ) has failed to protect, in the manner intended by Congres...
In this Intellectual Property Viewpoints series, we tend to focus on copyright and patent law – the ...
This contribution to the annual teaching edition of the Saint Louis University Law Journal encourage...
This article argues for a fundamental shift in the way famous trademarks are protected under America...
The trademark use doctrine plays a critical role in ensuring that trademark law serves its proper pu...
Ever since the creation of federal dilution law, legal commentators have expressed consternation abo...
In the previous entry in this series, I discussed the narrow foundations of trademark law and its mo...
This article, however, takes the view that the basic landscape in trademark law is unlikely to chang...
The adoption of the Federal Trademark Dilution Act (the “FTDA”) in 1995, which incorporated a federa...