Trademark - Page 3
This is FindLaw's collection of Trademark articles, part of the Intellectual Property section of the Corporate Counsel Center. Law articles in this archive are predominantly written by lawyers for a professional audience seeking business solutions to legal issues. Start your free research with FindLaw.
Intellectual Property
Trademark Articles
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Depending on your idea, the best protection my be a patent. -
What is a Trademark? A TRADEMARK is either a word, phrase, symbol or design, or combination of words, phrases, . -
Background Increasingly, consumers are utilizing Internet addresses for finding specific sources of goods and se. -
This article provides a focused discussion on Copyright and Trademark law whereby the Federal courts do not allow new rights to be superimposed on a comprehensive statutory scheme, effectively barring indemnity and contribution claims in such cases. -
This article provides a comprehensive analysis of the changes to the Trademark Law that will take effect on October 30, 1999. -
Dilution. To a chemist, it refers to the process of reducing the concentration of a solute in solution, usually simply by mixing with more solvent. But to a trademark lawyer, it is the raison de'etre for the Federal Trademark Dilution Act (FTDA), which provides in part that the owner of a famous mark is entitled to relief against another person's commercial use in commerce of a mark, "if such use begins after the mark has become famous and causes dilution of the distinctive quality of the mark." -
While White and Williams can't guarantee that a predatory tiger won't spring from the commercial underbrush to threaten a client?s treasured trademark, some preventive legal medicine can help avoid an unfortunate surprise attack. One prescription is to plan carefully when you use your existing trademark in a new business sector. -
The GATT implementing legistation (GATT Act) contains two amendments to the U.S. Trademark Act, also known as the . -
In our April, 1994 Report, we discussed recent decisions by U.S. Courts of Appeal for the Eighth and Ninth Circui. -
When it comes to intellectual property, filmmakers tend to overlook the importance of trade marks and focus all of their attention on the marginally sexier world of copyright.This is understandable but could prove costly, particularly given the evolving nature of the film industry with respect to ancillary revenue opportunities.