This article discusses Mark McKenna’s Testing Modern Trademark Law’s Theory of Harm as an important step forward in challenging trademark expansionism, going back to basics and asking us to assess for truth value several propositions that now seem so self-evident to lawyers and judges as to not require any empirical support at all. Like McKenna, the author believes that if the law looked for the evidence behind present axioms of harm, it would not find much there. McKenna and the author share an interest in empirical evidence on marketing and a desire to bring its insights to trademark law. But how did today’s theories of harm resulting from any kind of confusion, even confusion over unrelated goods, become “common sense” to judges, particu...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
Despite the presence of a vigorous debate over the proper scope of trademark protection, scholars ha...
In his article, “A Consumer Decision-Making Theory of Trade-mark Law,” 98 Va. L. Rev. 67 (2012), Pro...
This article discusses Mark McKenna’s Testing Modern Trademark Law’s Theory of Harm as an important ...
Modern scholarship takes a decidedly negative view of trademark law. Commentators rail against doctr...
Abstract Over the course of the twentieth century, judges came to accept trademark owners’ arguments...
The primary objective of this Article is to illustrate the tendency of judges to inappropriately rel...
This Article challenges the modern rationale for trademark rights. According to both judges and lega...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that trademark law traditionally sought to protect con...
In this article the author responds to James Gibson’s article Risk Aversion and Rights Accretion in ...
The confusion that has accompanied the effort to graft a dilution remedy onto federal trademark law ...
The typical shorthand justification for trademark rights centers on avoiding consumer confusion. But...
Trademark law has de-evolved. It has transitioned from an efficient mechanism for ensuring competiti...
Trademark tacking allows a mark owner to adjust her mark without losing protection. The test for det...
This article argues that trademark infringement and dilution are best understood as commercial behav...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
Despite the presence of a vigorous debate over the proper scope of trademark protection, scholars ha...
In his article, “A Consumer Decision-Making Theory of Trade-mark Law,” 98 Va. L. Rev. 67 (2012), Pro...
This article discusses Mark McKenna’s Testing Modern Trademark Law’s Theory of Harm as an important ...
Modern scholarship takes a decidedly negative view of trademark law. Commentators rail against doctr...
Abstract Over the course of the twentieth century, judges came to accept trademark owners’ arguments...
The primary objective of this Article is to illustrate the tendency of judges to inappropriately rel...
This Article challenges the modern rationale for trademark rights. According to both judges and lega...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that trademark law traditionally sought to protect con...
In this article the author responds to James Gibson’s article Risk Aversion and Rights Accretion in ...
The confusion that has accompanied the effort to graft a dilution remedy onto federal trademark law ...
The typical shorthand justification for trademark rights centers on avoiding consumer confusion. But...
Trademark law has de-evolved. It has transitioned from an efficient mechanism for ensuring competiti...
Trademark tacking allows a mark owner to adjust her mark without losing protection. The test for det...
This article argues that trademark infringement and dilution are best understood as commercial behav...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
Despite the presence of a vigorous debate over the proper scope of trademark protection, scholars ha...
In his article, “A Consumer Decision-Making Theory of Trade-mark Law,” 98 Va. L. Rev. 67 (2012), Pro...