Trademark
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
A trademark (also written trade mark or trade-mark) is a special sign. It can be a word, phrase, symbol, design, or mix of these things. It helps us know where a product or service comes from. It shows it is from one place and not from somewhere else.
Trademarks can also be things like drawings, shapes of products, sounds, smells, or even colors. For example, Pepsi is a trademark for soft drinks. The special shape of the Coca-Cola bottle is also a trademark.
The main job of a trademark is to tell people where goods or services come from. This stops people from getting mixed up. To get legal protection for a trademark, people register it with government offices. Examples are the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) or the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO). Registration gives the owner special rights. It also helps them take action if someone uses the trademark without permission.
Trademark laws are different in different places. But they usually let owners stop others from using their trademark without permission. International agreements like the Paris Convention and the Madrid Protocol make it easier to register and protect trademarks in many countries. The TRIPS Agreement sets basic rules for trademark protection that all member countries must use.
Terminology
The word trademark can also be spelled trade mark in places like the EU, UK, and Australia, and as trade-mark in Canada. No matter how you spell it, it all means the same thing.
In the United States, the Lanham Act says a trademark is any word, phrase, symbol, design, or mix of these things used to show where goods or services come from. Trademarks help people know a brand and tell it apart from others. A service mark is a special kind of trademark used for services instead of products. The word trademark is used for both kinds.
The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) says a trademark is a sign that helps people know which company’s goods or services they are buying. WIPO helps trademark owners use one application to register their trademark in many countries through the Madrid Protocol.
Almost anything that shows where goods or services come from can be a trademark. Besides words, slogans, or designs, trademarks can also be non-traditional marks like sounds, smells, or colors. Some special types of trademarks include:
- Trade dress: the way a product is designed and packaged. For example, the unique look of the Hard Rock Cafe restaurants is protected as trade dress.
- Collective mark: a trademark used by members of a group to show that their goods or services meet the group’s rules. For example, BEST WESTERN is used by its hotel members.
- Certification mark: a trademark used by approved businesses to show that their goods or services meet certain quality rules. For example, the ENERGY STAR mark is used by products that meet energy-saving rules set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Trademarks should be used as describing words, not as nouns or actions, and they should stand out from normal text using special styles like bold letters or symbols. For example, say "LEGO® toy blocks" instead of "Lego's."
Trademark symbols
A trademark can be shown with these symbols:
- ™: For unregistered trademarks related to products.
- ℠: For unregistered service marks related to services.
- ®: For registered trademarks.
While ™ and ℠ are for unregistered marks, the ® symbol means the trademark is officially registered. Using the ® symbol for an unregistered trademark can be unfair and may lead to legal trouble.
Fundamental concepts
Trademark law helps people know where products or services come from and what quality to expect. It stops people from being tricked about where things come from. Trademarks can encourage companies to keep making good products so they don’t lose their good name.
Trademarks are different from patents and copyrights. Patents protect new inventions for about 20 years, after which anyone can use the invention. Copyrights protect books, music, and movies for the life of the creator plus many years. Trademarks can last forever as long as they are used and renewed.
| Trademark | Patent | Copyright | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protects | A word, phrase, design, or a combination that identifies and distinguishes each party's goods or services from those of others and indicates their sources. | Technical inventions, such as chemical compositions like pharmaceutical drugs, mechanical processes like complex machinery, or machine designs that are new, unique, and usable in some type of industry. | Artistic, literary, or intellectually created works, such as novels, music, movies, software code, photographs, and paintings that are original and exist in a tangible medium, such as paper, canvas, film, or digital format. |
| Example | Coca-Cola® for soft drinks | A new type of hybrid engine | Song lyrics to "Let It Go" from Frozen |
| Benefits | Protects brands against unauthorised registration by other parties and helps prevent others from using similar trademarks with related goods or services. | Safeguards inventions and processes against duplication, manufacturing, usage, or sale by other parties without the inventor's consent. | Protects the exclusive right to reproduce, distribute, and perform or display the created work, and prevents other people from copying or exploiting the creation without the copyright holder's permission. |
History
The idea of using marks to show who made or sold something is very old. Around 15,000 years ago, people in prehistory painted marks on animals to show who owned them. About 6,000 years ago in ancient Egypt, people used marks on stone and jars of wine in tombs.
The first laws about trademarks were made in the 1200s in England. Bakers had to use special marks on their bread. Modern trademark laws began in the 1800s in places like France and the United Kingdom. In the United States, important trademark laws were passed in 1881 and updated in 1946 with the Lanham Act. These laws help protect brands so people know where products come from.
Establishing rights
Trademark protection can be gained by registering the mark or, in some countries, simply by using it in business. Most countries use a "first-to-file" system, meaning the first person to register a trademark gets the rights to it. However, in places like the United States, Canada, and Australia, using the mark in business can also establish some rights, though registration offers stronger protection.
For a trademark to be protected, it must be distinctive. This means it should help people recognize a product or service easily. Strong trademarks include made-up words, words that have no real connection to the product, or words that hint at a quality without stating it. Weak trademarks are those that describe the product too plainly or are just common names.
| Applicant | Origin | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L'Oreal | 244 | 199 | 170 | 189 | |
| Novartis | 193 | 110 | 131 | 94 | |
| Euro Games Technology | 141 | 118 | 120 | 93 | |
| Shiseido | 124 | 103 | 98 | 93 | |
| Boehringer Ingelheim International GmbH | 106 | 110 | 54 | 60 | |
| Egis Gyógyszergyár Zrt. | 103 | 49 | 30 | ||
| Amorepacific Corporation | 96 | 31 | 47 | ||
| Huawei | 86 | 78 | 80 | 106 | |
| O'Reilly Automotive Stores, Inc. | 77 | 1 | |||
| BYD Company Limited | 73 | 13 | 21 |
Enforcing rights
When someone owns a special name, symbol, or design for their product or service, they need to protect it. This means they must take steps to keep the name unique and different from others. They can do this by recording their name with special groups, watching for anyone trying to use a similar name, and sometimes even going to court to stop others from using it.
If another company uses a name or design that is too close to yours, this is called copying. To prove this in court, the owner must show they really own the special name, that their name came first, and that people might get mixed up about who made the product. There are also ways to defend against these claims, like showing the name was used fairly to describe a product or to talk about another company in an honest way. Some famous names, like COCA-COLA or GOOGLE, have extra protection so even if someone uses a similar name in a different way, it can still hurt the famous name’s special place in people’s minds.
Other aspects
When a trademark is sold, it usually includes the business or things connected to it. In the United States, selling just the trademark without anything else is not allowed. This keeps the trademark linked to real products or services.
Owners can also let others use their trademarks with rules. This is called licensing. The owner must make sure the quality of the products stays the same.
With the internet, trademark owners protect their brands from being used in domain names. This stops others from using famous brand names online. Courts help balance these rights, making sure trademark owners can protect their brands while allowing fair use of the internet.
International law
Trademark laws help protect brands, but they only work in the country where they are registered. This means a brand in one country needs to register separately in another country.
To help with this, there are international agreements like the World Trade Organisation’s Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS). These agreements help countries agree on common rules so trademarks can be protected more easily around the world.
One important system is the Madrid system, which lets trademark owners register their brand in many countries with just one application. This saves time and money. There are also treaties like the Trademark Law Treaty of 1994 and the Singapore Treaty on the Law of Trademarks, which make the process of registering and managing trademarks simpler and more consistent across countries.
In the European Union, there is a special system called the EU Trade Mark (EUTM). With this, registering a trademark with the European Union Intellectual Property Office gives protection across all EU countries. However, countries in the EU still have their own trademark systems too.
Some very famous brands can get extra protection even without registering in a country, known as “well-known trademark status.” This can help prevent others from using similar names in ways that might confuse customers.
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