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Protecting Your Trademarks
Use it (and defend it) or lose it.
By Eva-Marie Boyd (February, 2004)
(Note: Eva-Marie has been a practicing attorney for
approximately 15 years. During that time she has been President of
the Orange County Barristers, President of her law school alumni
association, served on the Orange County Bar Association Board of
Directors for seven years, and as chair of the Orange County Bar
Association Legal Referral Committee for three years. She was a
panel attorney for California Lawyer for the Arts and has lectured
for that organization on copyright issues.)
Q. How do valid trademarks fall into the public domain?
A. By failing to monitor and protect them.
Last year I wrote an article distinguishing trademarks from
copyrights. Copyrights protect items of the visual arts, recordings,
writings, etc. Trademarks protect the names of goods and services
such as McDonald’s, Chevrolet, and Microsoft.
While copyrights last 75 years from the death of the creator,
trademarks have various procedures that need to be implemented to
keep them alive.
Aspirin was once a trademark; now it is part of our everyday
vernacular. It has become generic. I was asked if Dow Chemical could
lose trademark for the word, Styrofoam. Yes, that possibility
does exist.
Q. How do I protect my trademarks?
A. Stay in contact with the attorney who procured your
trademark or another trademark attorney of your choosing.
In my own practice I have a client who lost the name of a mark
most of you would recognize. She moved and failed to contact me for
10 years. When she did contact and I attempted to renew the name, I
was unable to do so. Why? 1. Because the mark had not been timely
renewed, and 2. Because she had "made no complaint" when
others used the phrase with great frequency.
Within six years of receiving a mark, you must make a showing to
the Trademark office that the mark is, in fact, still being used,
and from then on file a renewal statement every ten years.
But that is not all; you must send cease-and-desists letters or
sue others who are using the name for your category of goods. For
instance, the name "Mousin’ Around," which was filed in
the proper craft category, would probably not prevent that name from
being used for the name of a car.
There are 360 trademarks owned by Playboy Enterprises. I recently
had a client who felt that "playboy" was a common,
everyday term and he wanted to register Playboy Beach Club. I had to
tell him that a snowball in hell would have a better chance.
Just this month a court ruled that Playboy Enterprises Inc’s
trademarks "Playboy" and "Playmate" should be
protected even in Internet searches that prompt pop-up
advertisements. The defendants were Excite and Netscape. In its
ruling the court noted that "the rules apply in the actual
world with equal force to the virtual world …. Trademarks are not
to be used in a way that is confusing or dilutes the value of the
mark."
There are companies, which for a fairly nominal fee, specialize
in "Trademark Watches" both globally and nationally.
Something to consider is you have a valuable mark in need of
protection.
(Note: Have any questions regarding copyrights,
trademarks, or other business-related legal issues? Your name will
not be used. Mail, fax, or email your questions to Eva-Marie Boyd,
1160 Catalina St., Laguna Beach, CA 92651 fax: 949-497-3148; email LAWDDAW@aol.com.)
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