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Practice Group Luncheon

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Presentation on theme: "Practice Group Luncheon"— Presentation transcript:

1 Practice Group Luncheon
August 2017

2 Matal v. Tam (“The Slants” Decision)
U.S. Supreme Court rules that the “disparagement” clause is unconstitutional – violates First Amendment Trademarks are not government speech “Scandalous and immoral” provision of the Trademark Act is still intact In re Brunetti, currently suspended at the CAFC

3 USPTO Examination Guideline
Disparagement - Gone: TMEP provisions no longer apply Suspended applications will be removed from suspension and examined under other grounds If rejected in the past, file a new application Scandalous – On Hold: TMEP sections still apply Suspensions will remain in place until CAFC issues decision (In re Brunetti)

4 USPTO Examination Guideline “Merely Informational Matter”
**Cannot be overcome with acquired distinctiveness or amending to the Supplemental Reg., similar treatment as generic refusal** (1) Matter that is used merely to convey information: Likely to also receive descriptiveness rejection Examples: SPECTRUM for illuminated switches WHY PAY MORE? for grocery services PASTEURZIED for face cream (2) Widely-used slogans / messages: DRIVE SAFELY, THINK GREEN, MADE IN THE USA, ONE NATION UNDER GOD (3) Religious quotes: JOHN 3:16, THE LORD IS MY SHEPHERD I SHALL NOT WANT, AN EYE FOR AN EYE

5 Third-party Evidence in Ex Parte Cases
Applicant’s evidence was persuasive: TOPDOC: descriptive of physician referral services Applicant submitted hundreds of 3rd-party registrations with “TOP”-noun treated as suggestive, not descriptive TTAB reversed refusal – mark is suggestive Applicant’s evidence was not persuasive: FURNITUREBOBS rejected based on BOB’S DISCOUNT FURNITURE Applicant submitted third-party registrations and actual uses of “Bob” and “furniture” TTAB: In actuality, Applicant only cited to 5 uses of “Bob” and “furniture” (without other significantly distinguishing elements) TTAB: evidence does not show “widespread and significant use” enough to render the cited mark so weak that the public will be able to distinguish between the marks

6 will.i.am Black Eyed Peas
Applied to register “I AM” for cosmetics, jewelry Limitation: “all associated with William Adams, professionally known as will.i.am” Rejected based on prior registration for same mark / same goods TTAB: limitation is meaningless, confusion is likely CAFC affirms How does this compare to “affinity merchandise” court cases? Even when marks / goods are identical, the uses do not cause confusion when the goods are “associated with” the source of entertainment (ex: Survivor band v. Survivor show) Differences: Ex parte v. contested court case No evidence that he goes by “I AM” Protect prior registrant / avoid the issue


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