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Trademarking your product names, business name, logo design,
slogans and/or Domain Names is one of the most important
business decisions you will make. Logo design trademark
holders have the ability to prevent their competitors and
other third parties from using their registered trademark
without permission.
A logo design trademark is essential for all
companies that profit from product name or business name
recognition. Companies who fail to register their logo design
trademark, or companies currently conducting business using
an unregistered logo design trademark, run the risk of losing
some or all of their rights to continue to use their logo
design. This normally occurs when a competitor or unrelated
third party trademarks a mark that is the same or substantially
similar to an existing mark. Few companies have the financial
strength to overcome the full or partial loss of their right
to use their own business name, product names, logo designs
and slogans.
The greatest expense of a trademark is the
lack of it. The federal trademark registration process is
relatively straightforward. A trademark may be filed at
the state, federal or international level. Trademark filings
at the state level generally cost less than those filed
at the federal or international levels. Thankfully, one
does not have to incur the expense of unusually high hourly
attorneys' fees to simply register a trademark. Once a trademark
search has been performed and you have determined that your
mark is available the next step is to prepare and file the
trademark application. The filing fee associated with filing
a single federal trademark application is currently $325.00
per class. The federal trademark application preparation
fee is $250.00 per application.
Overview of Trademarks
The term trademark is frequently used to describe different
types of devices that label, identify and distinguish products
or services in the marketplace. Consumers often make their
purchasing choices on the basis of recognizable trademarks,
such as Coke, McDonald's
or Nike. The main thrust
of trademark law is to make sure that trademarks don't overlap
in a way that causes customers to become confused about
the source of a product.
Trademark Categories & Criteria
In order to serve as a trademark, a mark must be distinctive
- that is, it must be capable of identifying the source
of a particular good. In determining whether a mark is distinctive,
the courts group marks into four categories based on the
relationship between the mark and the underlying product:
(1) arbitrary or fanciful, (2) suggestive, (3) descriptive,
or (4) generic.
* Arbitrary.An arbitrary or fanciful mark
is one that bears no logical relationship to the underlying
product. For example, the words "Exxon"
and "Kodak"
bear no inherent connection to their underlying products
(respectively, gasoline and cameras/computers).
* Suggestive.This is a mark that evokes or
suggests a characteristic of the underlying good. For example,
the word "Coppertone"
suggests the color of a deep sun tan, but does not specifically
describe the actual product. Some exercise of imagination
is needed to associate the word with the product.
* Descriptive.A descriptive mark directly
describes, rather than suggests, a characteristic or quality
of the underlying product (e.g. its color, odor, function,
dimensions or ingredients). For example, "Holiday
Inn" and "All
Bran" both describe some aspect of their underlying
product or service (respectively, hotel rooms and breakfast
cereal). Unlike arbitrary or suggestive marks, descriptive
marks are not inherently distinctive and are protected only
if they have acquired "secondary meaning." This
occurs when the consuming public primarily associates that
mark with a particular producer.
* Generic.A generic mark is a mark that describes
the general category to which the underlying product belongs.
For example, the term "Computer" is a generic
term for computer equipment. Generic marks are entitled
to no protection under trademark law. Thus, a manufacturer
selling "Computer" brand computers (or "Apple"
brand apples, etc.) would have no exclusive right to use
that term with respect to that product.
Service Marks
While trademarks promote products, service marks promote
services and events. Generally, when a business uses its
name to market its goods or services in the yellow pages,
on signs or in advertising copy, the name qualifies as a
service mark. Some familiar service marks include Jack in
the Box (fast food service), Blockbuster (video rental service),
and the Olympic Games' multi-colored interlocking circles
(international sporting event).
Certification Marks
These are symbols, names or devices used by an organization
to vouch for products and/or services provided by others,
like the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval. This type of
mark may cover characteristics such as regional origin,
method of manufacturing, product quality and service accuracy.
Some examples of certification marks include: Stilton cheese
(a product from the Stilton locale in England) and Carneros
wines (from grapes grown in the Carneros region of Sonoma/Napa
counties).
Collective Marks
These are symbols, labels, words, phrases or other marks
used by members of a group or organization to identify goods,
members, products or services they render. Collective marks
are often used to show membership in a union, association
or other organization. For example, the letters "ILGWU"
on a shirt label is the collective mark that identifies
the shirt as a product of a member of the
International Ladies Garment Workers Union. The use
of a collective mark is restricted to members of the group
or organization that owns the mark. If the group wants to
identify its product or service, it must use its own trademark
or service mark.
Trade Dress
A product may also come to be known by its distinctive packaging
- Kodak film or the Galliano liquor bottle, for example
- and a service by its distinctive decor or shape, such
as the decor of Banana Republic clothing stores. Collectively,
these types of identifying features are termed "trade
dress." Because trade dress often serves the same function
as a trademark or service mark (the identification of goods
and services in the marketplace), trade dress can be protected
under the federal trademark laws and in some cases registered
as a trademark or service mark with the Patent and Trademark
Office.
Differences Between Trade Names and
Trademarks
The name that a business uses to identify itself is called
a "trade name." This is the name the business
uses on its stock certificates, bank accounts, invoices
and letterhead. When used to identify a business as an entity
for non-marketing purposes, the trade name is given some
protection under state and local corporate and fictitious
business name registration laws, but it is not considered
a trademark or entitled to protection under trademark laws.
If, however, a business uses its name to identify a product
or service produced by the business, the name will then
be considered a trademark or service mark and be entitled
to protection if it is distinctive enough.For instance,
Apple Computer Corporation uses the trade name Apple as
a trademark on its line of computer products.In much the
same manner, a domain name used to identify an Internet-based
business qualifies as a mark when it is used in connection
with a website that offers e-commerce and/or services to
the public.
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