The present article considers whether the confusion analysis in trademark law is at risk of being used strategically as a self-servicing mechanism by the industry to obtain trademark rights to descriptive, cultural and non-traditional signs. In this context, two features of the trademark system are particularly worrisome. First, trademark owners can strengthen the distinctive character of their marks by investing in marketing and branding campaigns. Second, trademark owners can afford expensive surveys demonstrating the high distinctiveness of their marks and strengthening their position in an infringement case. A study of 189 Dutch cases reveals that in the likelihood-of-confusion assessment, the degree of a mark’s distinctiveness and corr...
This study is the first empirical analysis of legal reasoning in trademark opposition proceedings in...
Nearly every important issue in trademark litigation turns on the question of what consumers in the ...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that trademark law traditionally sought to protect con...
The present article considers whether the confusion analysis in trademark law is at risk of being us...
This Article argues that consumer confusion plays a pervasive and important role in our trademark sy...
This article shows the necessity of including policy concerns, in particular the need to keep signs ...
The primary objective of this Article is to illustrate the tendency of judges to inappropriately rel...
The typical shorthand justification for trademark rights centers on avoiding consumer confusion. But...
This article argues that the existing balancing tools in EU trademark law are not sufficient to prev...
Modern scholarship takes a decidedly negative view of trademark law. Commentators rail against doctr...
Trademark law is in the midst of an identity crisis. The prevailing economic account of the law has ...
The likelihood of confusion standard defines the scope of trademark infringement. Likelihood of conf...
Trademark law centers its analysis on consumer confusion. With some significant exceptions, the basi...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
Trademark merchandising - the use of trademarks on promotional products for profits or simply as adv...
This study is the first empirical analysis of legal reasoning in trademark opposition proceedings in...
Nearly every important issue in trademark litigation turns on the question of what consumers in the ...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that trademark law traditionally sought to protect con...
The present article considers whether the confusion analysis in trademark law is at risk of being us...
This Article argues that consumer confusion plays a pervasive and important role in our trademark sy...
This article shows the necessity of including policy concerns, in particular the need to keep signs ...
The primary objective of this Article is to illustrate the tendency of judges to inappropriately rel...
The typical shorthand justification for trademark rights centers on avoiding consumer confusion. But...
This article argues that the existing balancing tools in EU trademark law are not sufficient to prev...
Modern scholarship takes a decidedly negative view of trademark law. Commentators rail against doctr...
Trademark law is in the midst of an identity crisis. The prevailing economic account of the law has ...
The likelihood of confusion standard defines the scope of trademark infringement. Likelihood of conf...
Trademark law centers its analysis on consumer confusion. With some significant exceptions, the basi...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
Trademark merchandising - the use of trademarks on promotional products for profits or simply as adv...
This study is the first empirical analysis of legal reasoning in trademark opposition proceedings in...
Nearly every important issue in trademark litigation turns on the question of what consumers in the ...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that trademark law traditionally sought to protect con...