Posts published during April, 2009

The idea that one can ‘lose’ a trademark contains a beautiful nugget of irony. Somehow a trademark can become not too big to fail, but too big to be anything but all-encompassing. Here are some of my favorite genericizations (a terrible word resulting from Plasticolor Molded Products v. Ford Motor Company) from the past, and some future predictions.

Genericization in progress

At one point, Dry Ice was actually trademarked by the Dry Ice Corporation of America (now that’s creative naming). Trademarked in 1925 the term has completely entered the common lexicon and is obviously generic to any high school science student. Dry Ice is just one of many substances that began as a specific product, along with Heroin, Aspirin and Linoleum. It makes sense on some level that a common material, like graphite or rubber, would be a word of common usage and not a brand, even if it was originally manufactured. For things like Velcro and Vaseline we’ll have to wait and see, but they too look like they will be on the way out pretty soon.

Another surprise trademark was the Thermos, originally a trademarked vacuum flask that went generic in 1963. I think that anyone born in the recent generations understands that a thermos is a concept, not a specific thing, just like the Yo-yo and the Zipper (also long-dead trademarks).

Does this cause problems? I see it more as a victory for language. When a new idea pervades our culture so deep that it becomes part of everyday speech, how can we restrict its use? I am very glad that in our legal system there are ways for trademarks to end and for speech to take over. While there may be unhappy marketing executives in our wake, society wins this battle.

So what will happen next? Will all window cleansers be referred to as Windex? Could iPod turn into a term for any portable music player (like the Walkman)? Perhaps the USPTO has become more discerning in its practice, or maybe companies have become more creative. Maybe it is impossible to know now what will be the next Cellophane or Escalator (1859, and seriously, escalator? wow).

I look forward to taking a Sharpie to some Q-tips and stacking them on Styrofoam before I Photoshop them into a hilarious image on my Netbook. Hope I don’t get sued.

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A Monster in Trademark

I initially intended to blog about how trademark laws largely accomplished their goal of reducing search costs for consumers. While this week’s readings brought up recent court rulings that misinterpret trademark law (the “use” of trademarks as keywords and selling ads to competitors of that trademark owner), it seemed that the laws themselves manage to limit the potentially damaging aspects – controlling language to restrict competitors – with the benefits of trademarks – conveying information about the product to consumers. And after weeks of bashing on copyright and patent laws, I wanted to believe that trademark was one area in our legal system that was more balanced and fair.

After finding out about the trademark history of Monster Cable, it became a bit more difficult to support this position. Some background should be given on Monster first. Monster Cable was founded in 1979 and primarily makes cables for audio products. They’ve expanded into making cables for other products as well, such as gaming consoles, computers, TVs, and cars. Basically, looking at their main site, you get the idea that their primary business comes from cables.  That, and for some reason, they also sell mints.

As a trademark, Monster Cable would most likely fall under the arbitrary/fanciful category since Monster has no relation to the cables themselves. As an arbitrary trademark, Monster would have strong trademark protection. At the same time, the protection arguably would not be so strong outside of cable-related products.

With this in mind, it was a surprise to find out how aggressive Monster has been in protecting its trademark on “Monster”. Monster Cable has over 70 trademarks on the generic word “Monster,” has filed over 190 actions at the PTO, and has pursued 30 lawsuits on trademark infringement. Here’s a list of some of the businesses they’ve pursued, either through lawsuits or through appeals to the PTO:

  • “Monster Transmission” – a Florida company that makes automotive partsmonstertransmission
  • “Junk Food Monster” – A woman that sells tshirts that say “Junk Food Monster” on it to promote good eating habits. Her trademarks on “Crash Monster” and “Pollution Monster” promote similar good habits and have also been appealed. (Image taken from their file at the PTO)
    junkfoodmonster
  • “Monster.com” – Website owned by Monster Worldwide, Inc. that offers employment-searching services.
    monsteremp
  •   “Slim Jim Monster” – Meat-snack sticks from ConAgra Foods.
    slimjimmonster 
  • “Monster Mini Golf” – 18-hole indoor putting greens.
    monsterminigolf 

Monster Cables has also pursued large companies such as ConAgra Foods (the meat snacks above), Disney (their “Monsters, Inc” movie), and the Boston Red Sox (“Green Monster” food sold in the stadium).

Monster Cables defended its actions by stating that it had to defend its “famous” trademark since it had invested so many resources into developing the goodwill. In an open letter on their website, Monster Cables and its founder Noel Lee listed some of the trademarks that they owned in defense of their aggressive actions. Some of the trademarks were:

  • “Monster” – Sporting goods
  • “Monster attitude” – clothing such as sweatshirts, jackets, pants, tshirts
  • “Monster music” – compact discs

I highly doubt that there was any consumer confusion between Monster meat-snack sticks and Monster cables. Given this, I didn’t expect any of these appeals or lawsuits to be very successful. Thus, it was even more surprising to find that Monster has been fairly successful at getting others to either settle out of court or to abandon their trademark applications. For example, the Discovery Channel’s “Monster Garage” settled and paid licensing fees to use the trademark. Also, of 87 opposition filings at the PTO, 20 eventually abandoned their claims. These abandonments may have been due to financial reasons. Thus, the most alarming aspect of all of this is Monster Cable’s attempts to construct barriers to competition through the control of the generic term “Monster,” and their actual success at doing so. Monster’s actions could cause other companies with legitimate trademarks to circumvent certain words out of fear of lawsuit. This would then raise search costs, since consumers cannot use certain words to find a certain product. This of course runs counter to the purpose of trademark law, which was meant to foster competition and to lower search costs, not raise them. 

However, there’s a silver lining to all of this, I think. The majority of Monster’s success was not from any court ruling, but from out of court settlements. In addition, in lawsuits and applications that persisted through the process, Monster was often forced to drop the case altogether. For example, in the Monster Mini Golf case, Monster Cable eventually gave up and paid the defendant’s legal fees. Furthermore, any lawsuits that Monster tries to pursue on some of their 70 trademarks (such as their trademark on clothing) will most likely not succeed; they’ve probably lost their rights to it through a lack of use. It seems then that the problem is not in trademark law, but rather a more general problem of litigation costs. 

Thus, my original hope of trademark law as being balanced and fair appears to be intact. While there still remains certain issues in litigation costs and with search engine liability in trademarks, monsters are unable to exploit their  trademarks to prevent fair competition in a court of law.

Play a game with me: imagine that scientists at MIT have succeeded in creating beings of artificial intelligence (AI).  These machines can think and feel just as humans do.  They demonstrate the capacity to act with intent, to make ethical decisions, and to learn from experience.  They are composed of silicon circuitry or biologically engineered computational molecular arrays derived from an analysis of the brain’s “software”.  As inventions, they clearly possess the requisite originality or “non-obviousness” for patentability.  But in the regime of AI, a new and yet unanswered question for patentability presses upon us: as free-thinking moral and conscious agents, do they fall outside the conceptual boundaries of “property”?

The above scenario is actually less theoretical than it first appears.  Many prominent scientists, including MIT computer science professor and “futurist” Ray Kurzweil, have written books (see for ex. Kurzweil, “The Age of Spiritual Machines”) predicting that humanity will be forced to confront this very question quite possibly within twenty years.  Indeed, the Media Lab at MIT has already succeeded in producing quite sophisticated forms of AI called “expert systems”.  Some are used to assist physicians in diagnosing diseases and others will be used to create the proposed “smart grid” for saving electrical energy.  These individual applications of artificially intelligent systems and the efficiencies they create are of great practical value, with the ability to save lives and money.  However, they represent only the first iteration of the evolution of devices into creations which may eventually become creative or even “aware”.

If artificially intelligent devices could be said to create ideas which never existed and interact with their environment in a way that we would recognize as “emotional”, should these devices receive the dignity of a more human appellation, and would they then be eligible for protections under the law?  Should they possess rights to “life” and “liberty” – and what would those rights possibly entail?  May we treat “consciousness in a box” as intellectual property, enslave its actions and own the fruits of its labor?

Just as patenting genes is seen as perhaps reducing the building blocks of nature to property, the evolution of artificial intelligence will pose yet more difficult issues.  If an expert system can explore, understand, quantify and improve upon fundamental processes such as manufacturing, chemical engineering, drug development and so on, the intellectual property will not only be the system but its capacity to produce further invention, ultimately reinventing itself.  This begs the question of whether the process of thought itself may be “property” if it can be replicated artificially.  May the process of thought then also be enslaved, or will intelligent devices then be entitled to freedom from ownership, and the fruits of their thoughts also for the common benefit of all?

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In 2005, the Supreme Court decided Merck KGaA v. Integra Lifesciences, substantially expanding the ability of drug companies to use patented compounds in drug research without fear of infringement. The case began in 1996, when Integra sued Merck over research Merck was funding on certain compounds for the prevention of angiogenesis. The research was primarily aimed at developing new drugs for fighting cancer. One of the compounds investigated was the RGD peptide, on which Integra held 5 patents that Merck had not licensed (negotiations were apparently attempted unsuccessfully). The District Court jury found that Merck had indeed infringed Integra’s patents, awarding Integra a $15 million judgment. Merck was displeased and appealed, but the Federal Circuit upheld much of the lower court’s decision, although they ordered the District Court to lower the damage award (it would eventually fall to $6.375 million). Still unsatisfied, Merck appealed again and its persistence paid off; the Supreme Court not only granted certiorari, but also unanimously reversed the lower court. Why did Merck’s luck change so dramatically?
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