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Trademarks

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Dos and Don’ts of Brand Management

 

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Coca Cola May Sue You For Using The Word “AND”
(Just kidding)

Dean R. Karau
October 20, 2011

Coca Cola has its tongue firmly planted in its cheek (this time) about an over-the-top claim of trademark rights.

Coca Cola Zero Facebook Page

For a link to the Coca Cola Zero Facebook page, click here.

The CAR FRESHENER Folks May Sue You For Photos Like This
(Not Kidding)

Dean R. Karau
October 20, 2011

Getty Images

Getty Images maintains a number of images in its stock photo inventory that include a tree-shaped air freshener, like the one above. 

The CAR FRESHNER Corporation owns a bunch of trademarks consisting of the product configuration of a tree-shaped air freshener for use with a variety of products, including the ubiquitous air freshener product in the Getty image.

The CAR FRESHENER folks sued Getty for, among other things, trademark infringement.

In early October 2011, a federal district court judge denied Getty’s motion to dismiss the trademark infringement claim, finding, among other things, that,

“after reviewing the images on Defendants’ website containing the Tree Marks, the Court finds plausible the allegation that a purchaser and/or user of Defendants’ images could be confused as to the source of origin of the images, believing incorrectly that ‘they originate from, are sponsored by, are approved by, or in someway are affiliated with Plaintiffs.’”

Something is rotten in the U.S. trademark scheme, and it’s exposed by a result like this. While this is a motion to dismiss rather than a summary judgment motion, a threshold question nevertheless goes unasked and unanswered – whether Getty’s use of the tree-shaped product in the image is a “trademark use in commerce,” which should be a predicate to a claim of trademark infringement. Here, the product being sold is the photo, not the already-purchased air freshener in the photo.

Watch out when taking the pic of your family on vacation. If you include your air freshener, you can get sued. Ludicrous? Yes, but this decision says it can happen. What next, Disney suing you for a photo of your family in front of a theme park?

For a link to the decision, click here.

Selling An Intentionally Fake Item - Copyright Infringement?

Dean R. Karau
October 20, 2011

In traditional Chinese funeral rites, family members often purchase paper replicas of money, a house, cattle, a car, and other items, and then burn them as a symbolic means of ensuring that spirit of the deceased has lots of good things in the afterlife. There are Chinese businesses which make and sell such replicas for funerals.

Fook On Sing Funeral Supplies, in Manhattan’s Chinatown section known as Funeral Row, is one such business. When a man in street clothes asked about purchasing obviously cardboard handbags with print designs that vaguely resembled those of Louis Vuitton, Gucci and others, the store clerk said “$20,” after which the undercover cop said, “you’re under arrest for criminal copyright infringement.”

Supposedly, the arrestee’s wife, pointing to a cardboard bag while holding a real Coach bag given to her as a gift from her husband, said, “If he gave me that bag, I’d beat him to death.”

For more information from a New York Times story, click here.

Twittad To Transfer Tweet To Twitter

Dean R. Karau
October 20, 2011

Twitter Icon

V.

Twittad

For more information, click on either bird.