Trademarks and trademark law | News and commentary from Cokato, Minnesota lawyer Tom James (also known as Thomas James or Thomas B James). This category includes general trademark principles such as the requirements for a valid trademark, registration, infringement, and dilution
The USPTO has announced that trademark fees in the United States will be undergoing significant increases on January 18, 2025. Here is a summary of the changes.
In addition to new Office Action response deadlines, the USPTO has announced that trademark fees in the United States will be significantly increased on January 18, 2025. Here is a summary of the changes.
Application Fees
You will no longer enjoy a discounted fee for filing a TEAS-Plus application instead of a TEAS-Standard application. All applications. other than applications filed under the Madrid Protocol, will require a fee of $350 per class. For Madrid applications, the fee is $600 per class.
Additional fees must be paid in the following situations:
Insufficient information in the application: $100
Use of a custom-made identification of goods or services (as distinguished from using one of the pre-approved descriptions appearing in the Trademark ID Manual): $100
Each additional group of 1,000 characters over the first 1,000 characters in an identification: $200.
Madrid applications are not subject to these additional fees.
Statement of Use Fees
Beginning January 18, 2025, filing a Statement of Use or an Amendment to Allege Use will cost $150 each instead of $100.
Maintenance Fees
The filing fee for a declaration of use under Section 8 or 71 will be $325 per class instead of $225 per class.
The filing fee for an affidavit of incontestability under Section 15 will be $250 per class.
The filing fee for a Section 9 registration will be $350.
In conjunction with the Trademark Office’s new audit program, these fee increases provide a strong incentive to review your registration portfolio to see if there are any registrations, or registration classes, that should be removed.
In recent years, the United States Supreme Court has been grappling with the thorny question of how the First Amendment applies to trademarks. In this blog post, attorney Thomas B. James attempts a reconciliation of First Amenment trademark decisions
In recent years, the courts have been grappling with some long-standing legal issues which – believe it or not – do not involve AI. Some involve trademark rights. The United States Supreme Court has been grappling with the thorny question of how the First Amendment applies to trademarks. In this blog post, attorney Thomas B. James attempts a reconciliation of recent pronouncements.
The Slants (Matal v. Tam)
Queen Victoria, after whom an era of highly restrictive faux morality is named.
Simon Tam, lead singer of the band, The Slants, tried to register the band name as a trademark. The USPTO denied the application, citing 15 U.S.C. § 1052(a). That provision prohibited the registration of any trademark that could “disparage . . . or bring . . . into contemp[t] or disrepute” any persons. The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals declared the statute facially unconstitutional under the First Amendment. The U.S. Supreme Court affirmed. Matal v. Tam.
The USPTO argued that the issuance of a registration certificate is “government speech.” Since the government and its members are not required to maintain neutrality in the views they express and are only required to maintain viewpoint neutrality when regulating private speech, the USPTO contended that it was not required to maintain viewpoint neutrality when deciding whether to issue a trademark registration certificate or not. The Court rejected that argument, holding that a trademark is private speech. As such, the government is not free to engage in viewpoint discrimination when deciding which ones to favor with a registration certification.
“If the federal registration of a trademark makes the mark government speech, the Federal Government is babbling prodigiously and incoherently.”
— Hon. Samuel Alito, in Matal v. Tam
Commercial speech
At one time, the Court took the position that the First Amendment does not protect commercial speech (speech relating to the marketing of products or services). Valentine v. Chrestensen (1942) (“[T]he Constitution imposes no . . . restraint on government as it respects purely commercial advertising.”)
The Central Hudson test, as it has come to be known, holds, first, that commercial speech receives First Amendment protection only if it concerns lawful activity and is not false or misleading. If it clears those two hurdles, then government regulation of it is permissible only if the regulation directly advances a substantial government interest and is not more extensive than necessary to serve that interest. That is to say, the regulation must be narrowly tailored to advance a substantial government interest.
In other words, commercial speech receives an intermediate level of scrutiny. Unlike regulations of political speech, the government only needs to identify a “substantial” interest, not necessarily a “compelling” one. Also unlike political speech, the regulation in question does not have to be the least speech-restrictive means of achieving it. It is required to be no more extensive than necessary to serve the interest in question, however.
In Tam, the Court held that it did not need to decide whether trademarks are commercial speech or not. The Court rejected the government’s contention that it has a substantial interest in protecting people from hearing things they might find offensive, declaring that “the proudest boast of our free speech jurisprudence is that we protect the freedom to express ‘the thought that we hate.'” See United States v. Schwimmer, 279 U. S. 644, 655 (1929) (Holmes, J., dissenting).
The Court also rejected the second justification the government offered, that disparaging trademarks disrupt the flow of commerce. The statute, the Court held, is not narrowly drawn to eradicate invidious discrimination. Prohibiting registration of trademarks that disparage any person, group or institution, it would also prohibit registration of marks like “Down with racists” or “Slavery is an evil institution.”
The Court also identified what it described as a “deeper problem”:
If affixing the commercial label permits the suppression of any speech that may lead to political or social “volatility,” free speech would be endangered.
— Hon. Samuel Alito, in Matal v. Tam
In short, the Court acknowledged that commercial speech can have non-commercial expressive content. When that is the case, courts should zealously guard against government encroachment on private speech rights.
FUCT
Two years later, the Court was asked to review the USPTO’s refusal to register FUCT as a trademark. The Court came to the same conclusion about the portion of the statute that prohibited the registration of “scandalous” or “immoral” trademarks as it did about the prohibition against registering “disparaging” trademarks. Because this, too, involves viewpoint discrimination, the Court held that this prohibition, too, violates the First Amendment. Iancu v. Brunetti, 139 S. Ct. 2294 (2019)
I’ve written about this case before. (SeeBalancing the First Amendment on Whiskey and Dog Toys.See also Court Agrees to Hear Parody Goods Case.) Basically, Jack Daniel’s Property owned (and still owns) trademarks in the Jack Daniel’s bottle and in many of the words and graphics on its label for its alcoholic beverages. VIP Products began making and marketing a dog toy designed to look like a Jack Daniel’s whiskey bottle. The toy had labels affixed to it parodying the Jack Daniel’s label. For example, it used the phrase “Bad Spaniels” in place of “Jack Daniel’s.” And instead of “Old No. 7 Brand Tennessee Sour Mash Whiskey,” it displayed “The Old No. 2 On Your Tennessee Carpet.” Jack Daniel’s issued a cease-and-desist demand. In response, VIP Products filed a declaratory judgment action seeking a declaration that its parody neither infringed nor diluted Jack Daniel’s trademarks and, in any event, was a protected “fair use” under the First Amendment.
The district court rejected these claims, essentially holding that the First Amendment does not establish a “fair use” exception for the expressive aspect(s) of a trademark when it is used as a source-identifier for a product. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed.
The United States Supreme Court reversed the Ninth Circuit. The Court opined that although using a trademark for an expressive purpose might qualify for First Amendment protection, that protection does not insulate the user from trademark infringement or dilution liability if it is also used as a source-identifier. Parodic uses are exempt from liability only if they are not used to designate the source of a product or service.
The Court did not mention Central Hudson or discuss the commercial speech doctrine. It is likely the Court did not feel a need to do that because trademark infringement involves trademarks that are claimed to be likely to confuse consumers about the source of a product or service. Such trademarks would not clear one of the first hurdles for commercial speech protection under Central Hudson, namely, that the speech must not be misleading.
“Trump Too Small” (Vidal v. Elster)
Steve Elster applied to federally register the trademark “Trump too small” to use on shirts and hats. The USPTO denied the application, citing 15 U. S. C. §1052(c). That provision prohibits the registration of a mark that “[c]onsists of or comprises a name . . . identifying a particular living individual except by his written consent.” Elster appealed, asserting that this statute infringed his First Amendment right to free speech.
The Federal Circuit Court of Appeals agreed with him. The U.S. Supreme Court, however, reversed the Federal Circuit, holding that this provision of the Lanham Act does not violate the First Amendment. Vidal v. Elster, 602 U.S. __ (2024).
The decision in this case is consistent with Jack Daniel’s. Unlike Jack Daniel’s, this case did not involve a claim that the use of the trademark was likely to cause consumer confusion about the source of the product. (After all, how likely would consumers be to mistakenly believe that Trump was marketing products ridiculing his own size?) In this case, the first two hurdles for commercial speech protection under Central Hudson would appear to have been cleared.
Reconciling this decision with Tam is not as easy. What happened to the idea the Court voiced in Tam that when commercial speech has non-commercial expressive content, courts should zealously guard against government encroachment on private speech rights?
The legislative history of Section 1052(c) demonstrates that the prohibition against using a living person’s name as part of a trademark was enacted for essentially the same reason that the prohibitions against disparaging, scandalous or immoral trademarks were: Members of Congress found the “idea of prostituting great names by sticking them on all kinds of goods” — like the idea of including scandalous, immoral or disparaging content in a trademark — to be “very distasteful,” and wanted “to prevent such outrages of the sensibilities of the American people.”1 That was the very same kind of “interest” that the government invoked in Tam and that the Court found insufficient and not tailored narrowly enough to sustain the speech restriction at issue in that case. What was different here?
By requiring consent, Section 1052(c) effectively precludes the registration of a mark that criticizes an elected government official while allowing the official to register positive messages about himself or herself. HILLARY FOR AMERICA was permitted to be registered, but HILLARY FOR PRISON was not. It seems an awful lot like viewpoint discrimination, doesn’t it?
Why shouldn’t the politically expressive aspect of a trademark (as distinguished from the purely source-identifying aspect) receive the same exacting strict scrutiny analysis that normally applies to regulations of political speech?
Well, the Supreme Court did not think this case involved viewpoint discrimination. The requirement of consent to use a person’s name in a trademark applies to people of all political persuasions, the Court reasoned. Consent would be required to register a politician’s name as a trademark whether the politician in question is a Democrat, a Republican, a Communist, or anything else, and consent would be required whether the politician in question supports or opposes, say, abortion rights, or gun rights, or anything else.
Nevertheless, the fact remains that the statute, as applied, requires an elected official’s prior approval of a trademark before it can be registered. Maybe that doesn’t rise to the level of a direct prior restraint on speech, but it would certainly seem to have a chilling effect on political speech at the core of the First Amendment.
Conclusion
It is not at all clear to me that the cases can be reconciled on a logically coherent doctrinal basis. Reliance on the common law history of trademarks might support a determination that Section 1052(c) is not unconstitutional on its face. I am not completely convinced, however, that the Court was adequately responsive to the argument that the statute is unconstitutional as applied to the names of elected officials. But what do I know? I’m just some guy living next to a cornfield in the middle of nowhere.
The line between descriptiveness and suggestiveness is not always clear.
Is that a source identifier in your pocket or are you just being descriptive?
A trademark gives its owner an exclusive right to use it in connection with a particular kind or category of products or services. At the same time, though, trademark law seeks to promote competition. To that end, it generally does not allow people or companies to claim the exclusive right to use generic words or words that are used to describe a feature or quality of a product. If someone could claim an exclusive right to use gasoline or unleaded as a trademark for petroleum products, then nobody else could enter the market.
To qualify for trademark protection, a mark cannot be merely descriptive of the product or service. It must be distinctive, in the sense that consumers see it not merely as a description of the product or service but as an identifier of the source of the product or service, that is to say, an identifier of the producer or sponsor of the product or service.
Sometimes a mark that is merely descriptive at first acquires distinctiveness over time. Through advertising and long usage, consumers come to see it as a source-identifier. International Business Machines (IBM) is an example. It is descriptive of the product or service, but over time consumers have come to associate it with a particular source of business machines. In general, though, words and phrases that are merely descriptive do not qualify for trademark protection.
Inherently Distinctive Trademarks
Some kinds of marks are regarded as inherently distinctive, meaning there is no need to make a showing of acquired distinctiveness before trademark rights may be claimed in them. A mark is inherently distinctive if it is fanciful, arbitrary, or suggestive.
A fanciful mark is something that is completely made up. Xerox is an example.
An arbitrary mark is one which, although a real word, bears no logical relationship to the product or service. Apple, as a trademark for computers, is an example.
A suggestive mark is one that hints at but does not directly describe a quality or feature of a product or service.
Why It Matters
A lot rides on whether a mark is suggestive or merely descriptive. If it is merely descriptive, then its first use in commerce will not be as a trademark. Competitors may freely use the same mark until it acquires distinctiveness. If you try to register it with the USPTO, you might get it on the Supplemental Register, but it won’t make it onto the Principal Register. It will not enjoy the presumptions of validity and ownership that trademarks registered on the Principal Register do. Maybe you will be able to get it there someday, but only if you present persuasive evidence of acquired distinctiveness.
Suggestive trademarks, on the other hand, may qualify for trademark protection upon their first use in commerce. And if registered, they get all the advantages of being included in the Principal Register.
Where Is the Line?
The difference between descriptiveness and suggestiveness is not very intuitive. The classic formulation is that a descriptive term directly describes something, while a suggestive term merely hints at it. If a term directly states what a product or service is or does, or literally describes a feature or quality, then it might be generic or descriptive, but it is not suggestive. If a term does not directly describe the product or service, or a quality or feature of it, that is to say, if some additional thought process is needed to get to the intended description, then it is suggestive.
The Jaguar trademark is an example of a suggestive trademark. The product does not literally feature or contain a wild animal. An additional thought process is needed to get to the intended descriptor, which in this case would be fast. Fast would be a merely descriptive mark for a car. Jaguar requires an additional thought process, namely, the idea that jaguars are fast, to reach the intended meaning.
Coppertone is another example. Suntan oil would be a descriptive mark. Coppertone, on the other hand, does not directly describe the product. Instead, it suggests what might happen if someone uses it, i.e., the person may acquire something akin to a copper skin color.
Incidentally, changing the spelling of a descriptive term generally will not bring it into the realm of inherent distinctiveness even if the word, as so spelled, technically is an invented one. Fastt Car, for instance, would almost certainly be treated by the USPTO or a court as a merely descriptive trademark. The relevant question is whether consumers would read or hear it as an adjective, not whether a member of the Spelling and Grammar Police Squad would.
Criticism
Courts and legal scholars have noted that the line between descriptiveness and suggestiveness is not always clear. Professor Jake Linford, for example, has argued that the distinction is “illusory at best,” and that a suggestive mark is “more like a descriptive mark than the law currently recognizes.” (Jake Linford, The False Dichotomy Between Suggestive and Descriptive Trademarks, 76 OHIO ST. L.J. 1367 (2015).)
Nevertheless, the distinction is currently recognized in the law, at least in the United States.
European Union
The European Union appears to take a narrower view of suggestiveness. For example, it denied protection for “How Can I Make You Smile Today?” as a trademark for orthodontic and dental supplies. As certain fast food chains and performing artists can attest, slogans and phrases can easily be claimed as trademarks in the United States. This slogan would clearly fall on the “suggestive” side of the suggestive/descriptive line under the classic formulations of the distinction in the United States.
Contains information related to marketing campaigns of the user. These are shared with Google AdWords / Google Ads when the Google Ads and Google Analytics accounts are linked together.
90 days
__utma
ID used to identify users and sessions
2 years after last activity
__utmt
Used to monitor number of Google Analytics server requests
10 minutes
__utmb
Used to distinguish new sessions and visits. This cookie is set when the GA.js javascript library is loaded and there is no existing __utmb cookie. The cookie is updated every time data is sent to the Google Analytics server.
30 minutes after last activity
__utmc
Used only with old Urchin versions of Google Analytics and not with GA.js. Was used to distinguish between new sessions and visits at the end of a session.
End of session (browser)
__utmz
Contains information about the traffic source or campaign that directed user to the website. The cookie is set when the GA.js javascript is loaded and updated when data is sent to the Google Anaytics server
6 months after last activity
__utmv
Contains custom information set by the web developer via the _setCustomVar method in Google Analytics. This cookie is updated every time new data is sent to the Google Analytics server.
2 years after last activity
__utmx
Used to determine whether a user is included in an A / B or Multivariate test.
18 months
_ga
ID used to identify users
2 years
_gali
Used by Google Analytics to determine which links on a page are being clicked
30 seconds
_ga_
ID used to identify users
2 years
_gid
ID used to identify users for 24 hours after last activity
24 hours
_gat
Used to monitor number of Google Analytics server requests when using Google Tag Manager