This paper presents a new empirical approach for courts to identify anticompetitive consequences of trademarking product features, so-called “trade dress”. Granting a firm rights in its trade dress (imagine a candy company employing a heart-shaped Valentine’s Day box) can diminish competition and harm consumers (consider the high price a heart-box monopolist could charge). Therefore, U.S. courts recognize such trade dress as “aesthetically functional” and refuse to grant a trademark right, even if the trade dress identifies the source of the product to consumers. However, it is practically difficult for courts to discern what kind of trade dress, if trademarked, would diminish competition in specific cases. Despite plentiful doctrinal comme...
In the present Essay, I discuss some of the roles played by trademark law in stimulating competition...
This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Marquette Law Scholarly C...
Justice John Paul Stevens’ Inaugural Lecture in Trademark Law honoring Beverly Pattishall truly is a...
Although trademark law permits the protection of “trade dress” (distinctive product shape, ornamenta...
The protection of trade dress restricts the ability of competitors to compete by imitation. It may...
With the rise of branding and marketing, firms started using trade dress such as product features or...
The problem of trade dress protection is this: What rules should we apply to trade dress protection ...
In this Article, the author addresses an issue of continuing significant concern to trade dress owne...
Over the last sixty years, courts and the USPTO have engaged in an ill-advised expansion of trademar...
This archive contains an abstract of the published article5 Wake Forest Intell. Prop. L.J. 147 (June...
Trade dress functionality stands for a reasonable premise: features which are essential to the use o...
This article presents a new set of empirical results to support the theoretical construct that desig...
For much of American history, in order to promote competition among the producers of useful products...
In the last nine years, the United States Supreme Court decided four cases that concern trade dress ...
Trademark law exists to promote competition. If consumers know which companies are responsible for w...
In the present Essay, I discuss some of the roles played by trademark law in stimulating competition...
This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Marquette Law Scholarly C...
Justice John Paul Stevens’ Inaugural Lecture in Trademark Law honoring Beverly Pattishall truly is a...
Although trademark law permits the protection of “trade dress” (distinctive product shape, ornamenta...
The protection of trade dress restricts the ability of competitors to compete by imitation. It may...
With the rise of branding and marketing, firms started using trade dress such as product features or...
The problem of trade dress protection is this: What rules should we apply to trade dress protection ...
In this Article, the author addresses an issue of continuing significant concern to trade dress owne...
Over the last sixty years, courts and the USPTO have engaged in an ill-advised expansion of trademar...
This archive contains an abstract of the published article5 Wake Forest Intell. Prop. L.J. 147 (June...
Trade dress functionality stands for a reasonable premise: features which are essential to the use o...
This article presents a new set of empirical results to support the theoretical construct that desig...
For much of American history, in order to promote competition among the producers of useful products...
In the last nine years, the United States Supreme Court decided four cases that concern trade dress ...
Trademark law exists to promote competition. If consumers know which companies are responsible for w...
In the present Essay, I discuss some of the roles played by trademark law in stimulating competition...
This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Marquette Law Scholarly C...
Justice John Paul Stevens’ Inaugural Lecture in Trademark Law honoring Beverly Pattishall truly is a...