The year 2003 saw a great deal of activity in the ongoing development of trademark law. While the law both reconnected with its bricks-and-mortar roots and expanded to accommodate new fact patterns in the late 1990’s and early 2000’s, 2003 saw the beginning of a doctrinal contraction, with a requirement to tie inchoate harms to empirical foundations. Additionally, several issues of first impression were resolved, including the conclusion that domain names are a form of property. While 2003 saw a contraction of trademark rights, this is not necessarily a negative development for trademark owners. Instead, courts are merely refining the underlying doctrine and requiring the same types of empirical foundations that have been required in tradem...
This article considers the judicial role in developing trademark law. The issue is important because...
In this article the author responds to James Gibson’s article Risk Aversion and Rights Accretion in ...
Despite the presence of a vigorous debate over the proper scope of trademark protection, scholars ha...
This article is divided into three sections: (II) The past; (III) The Present; and (IV) The Future. ...
The Supreme Court’s continued trend of refining trademark rights combined with a new concern for fre...
The domain name system presents challenges to trademark law that are unique-in both kind and degree-...
The author shows that convergence has placed trademark law in the center of some of the hard-fought ...
American trademark law is expanding. The expansion began with the adoption of the Lanham Act in 1947...
In this Intellectual Property Viewpoints series, we tend to focus on copyright and patent law – the ...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that trademark law traditionally sought to protect con...
Trademark law has de-evolved. It has transitioned from an efficient mechanism for ensuring competiti...
We generally think about trademark law as a branch of intellectual property law. Because trademark l...
However, the most important part of the [Rescuecom Corp. v. Google, Inc.] opinion was not the decisi...
The Internet era has brought a new battlefield to U.S.-trademark-law disputes: domain names. Tradema...
The author states that the rapid growth of the Internet has caused a serious collision between the e...
This article considers the judicial role in developing trademark law. The issue is important because...
In this article the author responds to James Gibson’s article Risk Aversion and Rights Accretion in ...
Despite the presence of a vigorous debate over the proper scope of trademark protection, scholars ha...
This article is divided into three sections: (II) The past; (III) The Present; and (IV) The Future. ...
The Supreme Court’s continued trend of refining trademark rights combined with a new concern for fre...
The domain name system presents challenges to trademark law that are unique-in both kind and degree-...
The author shows that convergence has placed trademark law in the center of some of the hard-fought ...
American trademark law is expanding. The expansion began with the adoption of the Lanham Act in 1947...
In this Intellectual Property Viewpoints series, we tend to focus on copyright and patent law – the ...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that trademark law traditionally sought to protect con...
Trademark law has de-evolved. It has transitioned from an efficient mechanism for ensuring competiti...
We generally think about trademark law as a branch of intellectual property law. Because trademark l...
However, the most important part of the [Rescuecom Corp. v. Google, Inc.] opinion was not the decisi...
The Internet era has brought a new battlefield to U.S.-trademark-law disputes: domain names. Tradema...
The author states that the rapid growth of the Internet has caused a serious collision between the e...
This article considers the judicial role in developing trademark law. The issue is important because...
In this article the author responds to James Gibson’s article Risk Aversion and Rights Accretion in ...
Despite the presence of a vigorous debate over the proper scope of trademark protection, scholars ha...