This article examines the emergence of a territoriality-centered approach to acquired distinctiveness of European Union ("EU") trademarks, which devolves into a formalistic exercise of assessing market conditions of all Member States individually. In so doing, it challenges the conventional wisdom that nontraditional marks (e.g., shapes and colors) are best kept away from the EU register. The issue of acquired distinctiveness cannot be framed as a binary choice between keeping such marks freely available for use by everyone or their complete removal from the European single market; coexisting national rights and unfair competition laws make a patchwork that most companies find difficult to navigate. This legal patchwork raises a set of c...
127-132In recent years, European Trademark Law has often been cited as an example of a modern tradem...
This article critically examines the judicial applications of the EU functionality doctrine and argu...
This master thesis analyses the concept of detriment to the distinctive character of the trade mark....
This article examines the emergence of a territoriality-centered approach to acquired distinctive...
This article examines the emergence of a territoriality-centered approach to acquired distinctivenes...
This article argues that the existing balancing tools in EU trademark law are not sufficient to prev...
Ten years ago, I published an article in the Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review titled “Trad...
Intellectual property rights are traditionally subject to the principle of territoriality, meaning t...
This Article explores the intricate relationship between the exercise of trademark rights and the fr...
Courts in the European Union have in a number of recent cases resisted some of the innovations of th...
Ten years ago, I published an article in the Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review titled “Trad...
With aims of protecting trade mark proprietors against commercial practices of third parties that co...
EU trademark has a unitary character which means that EU trademark has an equal effect throughout th...
This Article analyzes the principle of trademark exhaustion or first-sale rule in the European U...
This thesis evaluates the contribution that the co-existential nation and Community trademark system...
127-132In recent years, European Trademark Law has often been cited as an example of a modern tradem...
This article critically examines the judicial applications of the EU functionality doctrine and argu...
This master thesis analyses the concept of detriment to the distinctive character of the trade mark....
This article examines the emergence of a territoriality-centered approach to acquired distinctive...
This article examines the emergence of a territoriality-centered approach to acquired distinctivenes...
This article argues that the existing balancing tools in EU trademark law are not sufficient to prev...
Ten years ago, I published an article in the Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review titled “Trad...
Intellectual property rights are traditionally subject to the principle of territoriality, meaning t...
This Article explores the intricate relationship between the exercise of trademark rights and the fr...
Courts in the European Union have in a number of recent cases resisted some of the innovations of th...
Ten years ago, I published an article in the Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review titled “Trad...
With aims of protecting trade mark proprietors against commercial practices of third parties that co...
EU trademark has a unitary character which means that EU trademark has an equal effect throughout th...
This Article analyzes the principle of trademark exhaustion or first-sale rule in the European U...
This thesis evaluates the contribution that the co-existential nation and Community trademark system...
127-132In recent years, European Trademark Law has often been cited as an example of a modern tradem...
This article critically examines the judicial applications of the EU functionality doctrine and argu...
This master thesis analyses the concept of detriment to the distinctive character of the trade mark....