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Meta
Empirical IP Research Conference: TM counterfeiting
Trademark breakout session #2: Counterfeiting and Its Effect on the Market for the Genuine Article
Facilitator: Scott Hemphill (Columbia; Visiting Professor, NYU)
Why we care: innovation policy; enforcement policy. Debate over magnitude: 10s of billions, 100s of billions in the US? Is that all damage? Lost profits: what monetary effects does it actually have on TM owners?
Counterfeiting scenarios: (1) seller fools the buyer: drugs, aircraft parts. Mostly we aren’t talking about that, but rather (2) buyer fooling everyone else: handbags, sunglasses, footwear. Or (3) nobody is fooled. Is that even counterfeiting? Dilution?
Standard story: substitution. Though substitution is highly contested. Overuse—becomes uncool. Positive stories: Sampling: I try it, I like it, and ultimately I buy the original (as with sampling in music downloading). Advertising: Might drive word of mouth. Still might be a case for enforcement—the legitimate seller still needs some way of recovering; illegality can be a form of price discrimination by segmenting the market.
Sprigman: law on books v. law on streets. In criminal counterfeiting, DOJ maintains and most courts accept that once they prove the D’s mark is identical to/substantially indistinguishable from the registered mark, confusion is conclusively presumed. Civil counterfeiting plaintiffs are now taking the same position. Real example: if I take a wallet and fake up an expensive LV emblem, and stitch “fake” all over it, so no consumer would be confused, the gov’t says that’s criminal counterfeiting. The Q of harm from counterfeiting has to be assessed w/in that framework.
McKenna: Other ways in which context matters: many kinds of products can be counterfeited, and some are much more harmful than others. Yi Qian has empirical evidence: similarity of price matters a lot. Where price is quite different, advertising effect tends to swamp substitution effect, but reverses as prices converge.
Joel Waldfogel: Deadweight loss can turn into consumer surplus if I can get a cheap copy of a handbag; no loss unless other people react badly to the fact that I own a copy. Can look across products: but are there systematic data for fake Gucci purses? Can look across individuals to see what their stock of fake/real stuff is. Do people who buy fake stuff start buying less real stuff over time? (Drawing on music downloading studies.)
Stefan Bechtold: can present consumers with well-known brands and knockoffs whose similarity is exogenously varied. Ask about perception of knockoff and brand—determine whether there is some advertising/spillover effects.
Mike Meurer: Child labor/slave labor producing counterfeit goods?
Sprigman: terrorism, narcotics, organized crime: it’s a problem w/manufactured goods generally!
Rahul Telang: comparative pressure on original seller to innovate to avoid copying? Pressure to lower prices that could be good?
Hemphill: Qian gets into that in her work on footwear in China. Firms most affected by counterfeits respond by going up vertically in quality—fancier, invest in vertical integration. Natural experiment in that 1995 marked an exogenous fall in TM enforcement as inspectors shifted to tainted food. Also some companies were more in with the Chinese gov’t than others, and could get more help—measured distance from gov’t. At the high end advertising effect dominated over substitution, opposite at the low end. One of the Megaupload papers finds an effect like this: substitution dominates for blockbusters but advertising dominates for smaller movies.
Sprigman: The potential is for lower cost advertising when other people sell copies than when you advertise for yourself. Other people give you credibility by choosing to consume the counterfeit. But the proper function of law here is a relevant consideration.
Telang: Bill Gates says, if you copy any product, copy mine. I’ll eventually get you to shift over/buy complement.
Hemphill: generating some illegality may enable your price discrimination.
Orly Lobel: Different things you can do in this realm: Dishonesty of honest people. Who is willing to do what? Also can measure willingness to pay: and can measure deliberate ignorance/degree of certainty about whether something is a counterfeit. Also: secondary markets. If there’s less demand/supply for counterfeits that can affect the size of the secondary market.
Hemphill: WIPO 2010 has a literature review on empirical studies—a few in the area of why people buy.
Glynn Lunney: categories of counterfeits. If the law allowed counterfeiting when no direct purchaser is confused the line might become more blurred. Could become difficult for buyers to tell the difference. If substitution and overuse are balanced by sampling/advertising, we should be able to allow the TM owner to enforce and TM owner would enforce efficiently; the question is consumer welfare—deadweight loss, desire for prestige brand.
RT: Dan Ariely on honesty—if you feel like a fake, you behave more dishonestly: another separate effect and it’s not clear how much law affects this but to the extent law affects magnitude it may matter. Also, Lunney’s theory is unlikely to materialize because TM owners will overenforce: they will often see things in a property frame whether or not allowing some counterfeiting would be beneficial, if they have the right to enforce and are not forced to give up on the idea of control by practical realities. (See Jessica Silbey’s work.)
Strandburg: might be that counterfeiting doesn’t matter as long as it’s illegal. Companies might want it to be illegal while being satisfied with a certain level.
Hemphill: much variation in reactions to buying counterfeits. 122 attendees at counterfeit purse parties, with no previous exposure to brand. 46% subsequently bought an original from the same line. Some felt very bad about having bought/being complimented.
McKenna: note how much this conversation doesn’t have to do w/TM law. The trouble is situations we all know there’s no confusion. It either is or isn’t another problem. Ought to be a question of whether we want copyright or design protection. If the mechanism of harm isn’t confusion, it doesn’t belong in TM. Sui generis design choices are very different. If we all recognize that there are problematic forms of counterfeiting, that’s where it’s most likely the case there’s genuine confusion. So long as TM does its traditional role, no problem. Next we ask whether TM should address another type of product.
Sprigman: maybe we know it’s not confusion, but INTA doesn’t know. There aren’t studies that fully contextualize shopping experiences. Need to know more about shopping intention. Lack empirical infrastructure to say where confusion really is. His intuition agrees that in large swathes people know what they’re getting and it’s just reducing deadweight loss, but there’s work to be done.
Strandburg: relates to panel session: confusion is all related to context, which includes price, but no TM study will ever ask whether people think the $20 thing comes from Louis Vuitton: decontextualization of confusion.
Empirical IP Research Conference: trademarks
Plenary Session: Measuring Consumer Confusion in Trademark Infringement
Facilitator: Barton Beebe (NYU)
Lanham Act: confusion is vaguely defined. Used to include “purchasers” but Congress deleted that phrase. 43(a)’s language is even broader. Flexible and slippery.
Panelists: Joel Steckel (NYU Stern School of Business)
Topic: Consumer Confusion Surveys Used in Litigation, Commenting on: Robert H. Thornburg, Trademark Surveys: Development of Computer-Based Survey Methods, 4 J. Marshall Rev. Intell. Prop. L. 91 (2005)
Wants to talk about dilution. Thornburg paper: not a very good paper, but that’s because it does two things—a catalog of different survey types/principles, then talks about difficulty of getting internet surveys into evidence. Much of what he said in 2004 is obsolete in 2014, when internet surveys are by and large admitted with some exceptions. Drilling down into one aspect: dilution surveys. If confusion is slippery, dilution makes that look like sandpaper. Harm the reputation/impair the distinctiveness of a mark: what does that mean?
Evident from usual surveys that courts accept that courts don’t really know what they’re trying to measure. Exxon survey: Nike v. Nikepal, where respondents were simply asked what if anything came to your mind when I first said the word Nikepal, 79% said Nike. Makes you wonder, what did the other 21% say? That is considered evidence; it’s evidence of association, but doesn’t correspond to impaired distinctiveness or harmed reputation.
Associative network memory model of brands. Knowledge is a network of bits of info: TM or associated logo, slogans, etc., and associations—anything that comes to mind when you think of a brand name. When the word Coke is presented to customers, they think of “tradition,” “nostalgia,” etc. and Pepsi is more excitement/use/taste. Dilution offense occurs when a junior brand enters and has another set of brand associations. Tarnishment if a new association is negative and somehow gets attached to the senior brand: if Victor’s Little Secret causes consumers to associate Victoria’s Secret with pornography. Test it by seeing if test group associates VS with porn. Blurring: distinctiveness would be impaired if link between Nike and sports was weakened; reaction time to associating Nike with sports would be a measure of blurring.
Takeaways: dilution has been difficult to measure because it wasn’t defined well. He argues that his definitions are suitable theoretically based definitions. Marketer’s perspective: a sensible definition would include the potentially dilutive power of mixing and adding brand associations. Measuring the degree to which brand asociations are held and how easily they are recalled can provide measures consistent w/the language of the law.
Lisa Larrimore Ouellette (Stanford)
Topic: Cognitive/Psychological Approaches to Modeling When and How Consumers Get Confused, Commenting on: Thomas R. Lee et al., An Empirical and Consumer Psychology Analysis of Trademark Distinctiveness, 41 Ariz. St. L.J. 1033 (2009); Thomas R. Lee et al., Trademarks, Consumer Psychology, and the Sophisticated Consumer, 57 Emory L.J. 575 (2008)
There is a fair amount of disagreement about TM’s goals and therefore about what facts matter. Take courts at their word: consumer mindset/confusion is what we care about. Multifactor test for likely confusion. Buyer sophistication: there’s a whole literature about consumer care in buying choices and courts aren’t paying attention to that, which we should bring in. No clear direction for likely confusion; another paper looks at likelihood of bridging the gap.
Sophisticated consumer paper: courts have ID’d many factors as relevant to this: low price of goods; purchase complexity, frequency of purchase; education, age, gender, and income of buyers; professional buyers or hobbyists. But little attention to consumer psych literature. That literature discusses consumer motivation as well as consumer ability to exert effort to make distinctions; they need both. Motivation can depend on the realm and on the person (some people have greater needs for cognition than others). Longer time to make decision without distraction can make difference. Courts make generalizations about low price, but that’s not the relevant question. Low financial risk may be high physical or social risk, creating more motivation.
Consumers who saw Mercedes Benz computers were more likely to think that Cadillac would bridge the gap to consumers too. Those test subjects with more experience buying consumers or more education were more likely to be confused—cuts against judicial doctrine.
Secondary meaning survey: created fictitious marks with no secondary meaning and mimicked typical trademark use on products—Chocolate Abundance, Party Hat, Fudge Covered Cookies etc. for chocolate covered cookies. If you believe the Abercrombie spectrum means something you’d expect some linear progression. What they found was that consumers were unlikely to see generic terms as indicating source, but for the rest it was all the same. And even generic term, over ¼ of consumers saw it as indicating a brand name. Presentation matters: large font/ordinary TM place makes TM perception more likely, small font/placement makes TM perception less likely.
Abercrombie may serve other interests, like protecting competitors—can still be reasons to encourage parties to select more arbitrary/fanciful terms over descriptive ones. Still, it’s not good for telling us consumer mindset, and we need other measures of distinctiveness and strength. Inherent distinctiveness is a very weak proxy for what consumers are looking at.
Could test other factors like similarity of marks and proximity of goods in similar ways. Courts’ general assumptions may be unreliable.
Mark McKenna (Notre Dame)
Topic: Qualitative Studies of Consumers Becoming Confused During Shopping, Commenting on: G. Miaoulis & N. D’Amato, Consumer Confusion and Trademark Infringement, J. Marketing 48-55 (April 1978); Vincent-Wayne Mitchell & Vassilios Papavassiliou, Exploring Consumer Confusion in the Watch Market, 15 Marketing Intelligence & Planning 164-172 (1997)
There aren’t very many good studies about confusion. One reason: marketing folks aren’t interested in confusion as defined in TM law. They’re intensely interested in how marketplace practices affect a brand, but there’s a very important distinction between brands and marks; brands are much broader concepts including associated meaning which can be affected by a much wider range of practices that might or might not involve TMs/confusion. Marketers are much more focused on the question of harm. Those might be in cases where consumers know accurately that a new product comes from the existing source (might be thought to simulate 100% confusion)—is there any harm to the brand under those circumstances? TM law accepts claims of harm much more readily than empirical evidence justifies. Studies are also focused on harm to the brand, not harm to consumers except maybe incidentally. So you get statements like the M&D’A study—confusion in many circumstances won’t harm consumers because consumers don’t care. Thus these studies press normatively to include in the definition of confusion a broader range of effects than TM academics care; trying to shape legal doctrine to test the things they care about.
First study: attempts to measure extent to which consumers exposed to new product that shares features—here, packaging of mints, features of the brand but not the TM—will generalize characteristics from the known product to the new product. Authors count stimulus generalization as confusion! They want this to count even if normal purchasing conditions make other characteristics distinguish the products, which they call “intellectually discriminating” between the products. “Confusion” despite the absence of source confusion on the theory that this generalization harms the brand by making it less “differentiated.” And indeed they so find—people think the new product will be refreshing and minty or will taste good. That, they think, is terrible! Consumers porting info from Tic-Tac to other mints makes Tic-Tac no longer as distinctive.
![]() |
| tic-tacs, Dynamints, and Mighty Mints |
Conventional TM perspective: completely irrelevant to doctrinal convention. TM is concerned with one kind of generalization: source information—who is responsible b/c of the presence of mark. Non-source info shouldn’t matter; and porting info for reasons unrelated to protectable to mark should also be irrelevant. Normatively this is correct; ability to generalize is often unqualifiedly good for consumers and for competition even if bad for particular brand owner. Effective communication of “my product is minty and tastes good too” is called competition. TM’s job is not to prevent people from selling products with similar desirable characteristics. That’s why we approve comparative advertising. How we describe a new restaurant: almost always in relation to something you already know.
Modern TM law becomes more intelligible if you read it through the lens of these studies. Doctrines that most befuddle academics are b/c courts squeeze into TM the broader concerns in these studies—dilution, initial interest confusion, post sale confusion.
Mitchell & Papavassiliou study: followed customers around watch store and asked them what aspects made the experience more challenging and what they did to overcome those challenges. Consumers say: fragmented nature of market; newness of tech in watches; hidden nature of watch movement; role fashion; too many brands/shops; low frequency of purchase; purchase of watches as gifts. The word for these effects isn’t confusion, but contextual factors that interfere with decisions in shopping/raise search costs, but not confusion. But maybe that means confusion isn’t well defined.
Very few of these interferences are things TM has anything to say about. Maybe that’s a good reason to avoid thinking of TM as a means to combat search costs but rather a particular sort of interference.
Info overload/overchoice. Consumers can struggle to choose when there’s too much info. Study tries to figure out consumer strategies—clarifying goals, narrowing choice, seeking additional info. This 1998 study could usefully be updated for new contexts like the internet. More interesting: what relationship TM has to the problem of overchoice. Paper simply asserts that counterfeiting is a source of confusion and law can fight that, but the study is from a store apparently lacking in counterfeits. Paper says subbranding is contributor to confusion, undertaken by brand owners themselves as a way of differentiating products: abundance of functionally similar products differentiated on a fashion platform. We think of TM as reducing search costs by making search less time consuming, but TM also affects differentiation in the market, and has a lot to say how close products may be and how they must be differentiated—product configuration like color of band.
To what extent is TM contributing to and reducing search costs, and how do those net out? If TM incentivizes lots of dimensional differentiation, that can increase search costs.
Studies differ but have common pressure to define confusion more broadly. Search costs rhetoric has made it easier to redefine confusion in this way. As Mitchell study illuminates, there are lots of other kinds of search costs, and it’s too easy to call those confusion. Academics: if you accept that TM doctrine has responded to these papers’ concerns even if the doctrine isn’t well suited, then we have to do more than point out the irrelevance of these types of confusion. Vacuum about types of confusion that ought to be relevant; studies focus on irrelevant question. Where empirical evidence is, doctrine moves. To resist, need to do some good empirical work about when consumers are confused in the way we want to mean it.
I’ve been asked to speak about the big data approach to consumer confusion. One promise, likely illusory, of big data is that we need not care any more about causality; we can merely find correlations, however unexpected, and react to them. But trademark infringement, and even dilution, requires a causal narrative as currently understood: this use created this mental state in the consumers who saw it. As such, big data may not be our savior. Instead, large datasets may be able to change the theory of what trademark infringement (and even dilution) is, the same way that previous advances in marketing and consumer psychology led some to reconceptualize what trademark infringement and dilution are, but that will be a normative choice even more than an empirical one.
We’ve seen one American case really take a stab at using “big data,” in the form of Google ad clickthrough rates. That’s 1-800 Contacts, Inc. v. Lens.com, Inc., decided by the 10th Circuit in 2013. The court says that the theory of IIC is that consumers seeking 1-800-Contacts (which we know, the court says, because they searched for the term) clicked on a Lens.com ad while believing it was a 1-800 site and, though no longer confused when they arrived at a Lens.com site, were nonetheless diverted. We have no idea how many were confused when they clicked and how many were not confused but rather were seeking a possible alternative to 1-800, but the court says that we do know the upper bound of the former number: the total number of clickthroughs, which was a tiny fraction of the impressions. For ads without the 1-800 Contacts trademark in the ad copy, Lens.com got a 1.5% clickthrough rate. This was too tiny to count as likely confusion even if all clickthroughs were the result of IIC, so Lens.com couldn’t be liable for infringement based on those ads. But ad clickthrough rates are always very low, so even a straight-up counterfeiter as in Rosetta Stone v. Google would seem to escape liability for infringement if you measure confusion in this manner.
This brings me to an argument made in a 2000 article by Alex Simonson, Survey Design in False Advertising Cases: he argues that we need to pay attention to attention versus comprehension. We might have a survey where a small percentage of people notice a particular product feature, say a picture of a black rooster and the label Gallo Nero on the neck seal of a bottle of wine, but those who do almost all make a connection to E&J Gallo wines. Or our survey might show that many people notice the neck seal, but only a few make the connection to E&J Gallo. Simonson argues that those are different results even if they produce the same net number of so called confused consumers: for legal purposes, we ought to be concerned more about comprehension than attention. Attention, after all, varies in the real world, and so artificial attempts to measure it may not be very good—but if we look at the percentage of people within the set who noticed a feature or symbol who were confused by that feature or symbol, we have a result that may be more generalizable as well as more important.
I think this point applies beyond surveys: it’s a truism that most advertising is completely useless—and now we have eye tracking studies showing that most people literally do not see most ads, to which one English court has referred in its reasoning, and MRIs showing that a lot of the time our brains don’t even react to ads, not even bothering to process them. In that sense, there is no such thing as an ad that is likely to confuse, because it’s not likely to reach us in the first place. But the people who don’t notice the ad are arguably irrelevant to any confusion inquiry. It’s only those who notice who might be confused. So, while I hate initial interest confusion and think Lens.com is right on the merits, I don’t think the analysis is right. All we know is the number of people who clicked on the link—but we don’t know how big a percentage that is of the number who noticed the link. It might be that almost everybody who looked at that link clicked on it, possibly because they were confused, and that scenario ought to concern us if it occurs, especially to the extent that there are no countervailing benefits from having the ad—and it’s hard to explain how the ad might benefit consumers who don’t notice it at all, though one might possibly construct an argument about chilling effects on truthful advertisers.
Also, we need a concept of relevant confusion, or materiality. Something that people mostly don’t pay attention to because they don’t care about it shouldn’t be deemed confusing. The broader takeaway is that we still need a theory to explain what we should care about and why; big data do not remove the need for big ideas.
That leads me into the papers on which the organizers specifically asked me to comment: Stefan Bechtold & Catherine Tucker, Trademarks, Triggers and Online Search, J. Empirical Leg. Stud. (forthcoming), and Lisa Larrimore Ouellette’s The Google Shortcut to Trademark Law, 102 Calif. L. Rev. 351 (2014).
Bechtold and Tucker used a large dataset to explore the effects of Google’s policy changes allowing more competitor keyword purchases of trademarks in Germany and France. Basically, they found little net change in the number of consumers who ended up on the trademark owner’s website, but a change in composition. They divided searches into navigational searches, where the consumer is searching for the keyword because she is directly interested in using the search engine as a shortcut to find a specific webpage such as the trademark owner’s website, and non-navigational searches where the consumer is doing something else. They estimated which were which by looking at how long the search was—so iPhone would be navigational but “how to restart my iPhone would be non-navigational”—and some other contextual factors.
After Google’s liberalization, navigational searches became less likely to lead to the trademark owner’s website, while non-navigational searches were more likely to do so. Percentagewise, they classified 20% of searches as purely navigational, while 80% were non-navigational. The policy change was associated in a 9.2 % decrease in consumers visiting the trademark owners’ websites when they used a search phrase that exactly matched the trademark. But consumers who were searching using the trademark alongside other words were more likely to reach the trademark owners’ websites in 14.7% of cases.
What can we glean from this? The authors rightly recognize the limits of their results. While they suggest that a navigational searcher’s search process might be “impeded” by unauthorized use of a mark, “as her attention is drawn to many third-party websites in which the searcher is not interested,” we don’t know whether she perceives any impediment. A searcher committed to finding the trademark owner’s own site can usually determine without clicking which site is which, especially with the prominent brands the authors tested. David Franklyn and David Hyman have shown that consumers are often confused about whether a search result is organic or paid, but rarely confused about the underlying source of those ads.
What the authors can test—and thus what their data might push trademark theory to care about—is whether trademark owners suffer any loss of consumer visits from the policy change. They conclude that their findings do provide an upper bound to potential negative effects of the policy change on trademark owners: they only suffer from negative consequences within the subclass of navigational users, only 20% of searches. In European law, arguably these negative effects have something to do with the “investment function” and the “advertisement function” of trademarks, though I have to admit I don’t really know what those are other than ways of stating ownership claims regardless of any effect on consumers. Even if the consumer began by wanting to visit the trademark owner’s site, we can’t say without knowing more that she’s worse off under Google’s liberalized policy. Maybe the new choices made her rethink her initial desires. If the ads weren’t confusing, we need some other reason to say that’s wrongful, and even the European approach doesn’t explain why diversion is a wrong to the consumer.
I’m intrigued by some subsidiary findings for the light they can throw on what we don’t know about consumers: First, “searches on Google appear to be consistently associated with fewer visits to the trademark owner’s site and more searches and activity before a visit to the trademark owner’s site even before the policy change” compared to Bing or Yahoo! Second, “relative to France, searches originating in Germany are less likely to lead to a trademark owner’s site and also … [German] searchers are more likely to engage in multiple searches prior to a visit to a trademark owner’s site.” National origin and Google brand loyalty appear to be independent effects on the extent to which users are precommitted to trademarks, which ought to shake our confidence that we know what matters to consumers, much less why.
More generally: the paper provides important information about consumer behavior, but not about what consumers are thinking—we can still only infer why they typed what they did. Theory cannot be abandoned. Moreover, the specific results cast into doubt the free riding model where it’s wrongful for a non-trademark owner to change consumer behavior regardless of what the consumer thinks—it seems that unauthorized uses may not in fact work harm in the aggregate. However, in a big data world where we don’t have any interest in knowing why behavior changed, only that it did, a court might attempt to fine-tune the rule, and not allow keyword purchases on the naked mark or so called navigational search, in order to make things even better for trademark owners. This is an example of a new legal theory that can emerge from new methods of measurement; it wasn’t suggested by previous doctrine. Whether that is a good or a bad idea depends not on consumer behavior but on one’s theory of trademark rights.
Lisa Oullette’s paper on using search engines to make trademark judgments primarily addresses a more basic question: how do we know whether a claimant has a mark at all, or a strong mark. She argues that if a mark is strong—either inherently distinctive or commercially strong—then many top search results for that mark will relate to the source it identifies, so you can use search engines to determine distinctiveness. Relatedly, she argues, the extent of results overlap between searches for two different marks can also be relevant for assessing the likelihood of confusion of those marks. For marks that don’t point uniquely to the claimant except within a particular set of goods and services she suggests using searches that add more information, like Mission Burritos rather than Mission, which might be deemed non-navigational in the Bechtold/Tucker framework.
Some thoughts:
(1) This theory may have the most potential implications for registration system: registration occurs in the abstract, not a full marketplace inquiry, and at least for word marks does not concern itself with the current visual appearance of the mark. The paper’s argument would imply that we should take search engine results much more seriously in the registration context to determine what a word means.
(2) However, we still need a theory of trademark meaning: example from the paper’s treatment of MICRO-THIN for condoms: all the results for “micro thin condoms” referred to the relevant plaintiff’s mark, but as the paper points out, this could mean strength for condoms or it could just mean that the plaintiff is currently the only user of a not particularly distinctive term within that category—I think this is a more significant weakness than the paper acknowledges, because by entering “micro thin condoms” as the search term you have already taken the position of a consumer using the term to locate something, while what we should want to know is “would a consumer use this term to identify source”? The paper’s conclusion: “when consumers search for MICROTHIN condoms, they are not simply looking for condoms that are ‘extremely thin’—they are generally looking for Kimono MicroThin condoms.” But that “when” contains the assumption that drives the result. We don’t know from these search results if the term is distinctive in the sense of serving as an identifier of source—instead the paper’s inquiry is whether the term is relatively unique within its field, and that really changes the basis for trademark protection into a less consumer-focused rationale and far more producer-oriented. The traditional question of source significance asks “if” consumers search for micro-thin condoms as an identifier of source, not what happens “when” they enter the search terms. Questions I would be much more interested in would be “how often do consumers search for Kimono condoms or Kimono micro-thin condoms?” and “how often do consumers use micro-thin to modify other brand names in their searches?” The Bechtold/Tucker type of data are far more probative of that than the search outputs.
(3) IP law’s largely textual focus, which makes it much more confident handling words than other symbols. Already reflected in the doctrine: Abercrombie spectrum for word marks might be empirically flawed, but it seems much more manageable than alternatives proposed to identify inherent distinctiveness in symbols or trade dress: Seabrook test for trade dress, for example, is just another way of saying, four times, is this distinctive? Unfortunately, just as with current doctrine, image search is far behind word marks; the Google shortcut might be most productive with respect to the least troublesome marks. And when there are both verbal and visual components, there are additional complications: there are word marks that are stronger when coupled with design features: a video “tube” site imitating YouTube’s red and white ovals.
(4) Concerns about using searches to assess likely confusion. To take another example from the paper, TELMEX currently produces first page results all related to one company, and the paper suggests that therefore a new mark AUDITORIO TELMEX might be confusing. But that seems to overweight the senior user’s interest: consider the old Gruner + Jahr v. Meredith case, PARENTS versus PARENT’S DIGEST. When I type in “parents magazine” I get only results for the former on the first page, but when I type in “parent’s digest” I get no results for PARENTS magazine—one might conclude that PARENTS is a rather weak mark since it doesn’t survive even minimal alteration.
The case law suggests that we should be interested in what consumers think when they see the junior use, and thus search on the juniormark is more probative than search on the senior mark. When I type in “Auditorio Telmex” I get no results relating to Telmex, the senior user. The results from the previous paper might also be useful here, given that consumers often refine their searches when they started with too abbreviated a term to get useful results. So, for example, if we found a certain number of people trying Telmex first and then Auditorio Telmex, that could be evidence not of confusion but of accurate understanding that these were two different entities and that the initial shorthand just wasn’t enough to identify the actual target. Note that we could call that dilution, or we could say that such results show that Auditorio Telmex wouldn’t dilute the naked Telmex mark at all, but we would need to be clear about our definition of dilution to make that call.
[did not get to say this para.] Relatedly: as price discrimination grows, different searchers may get very different results depending on their previous purchases or demographic profiles—which relates more closely to many of trademark’s concerns than current geographic personalization: Northeastern study showed this is already happening with segregation based on devices on travel sites. Might support the paper’s theory insofar as Google starts taking better account of differences in consumers, so price points and consumer sophistication would actually divide search results. On the other hand, the paper’s argument about using Google to divine relatedness of goods or likelihood of expansion does not seem persuasive: the paper says “if a non-expanded mark is sufficiently strong that consumers might anticipate such expansion, searches with keywords for those fields would likely still have pages related to the mark,” but given search engines’ attempts to provide presently relevant results I can’t see why that would be true—at the very least we’d need a lot more information about who writes these pages saying “I can’t wait for the McDonald’s nav rattan korma.”
These details reinforce my concern that we should be very careful about when we change doctrine in response to what we think we can measure. We might not even notice that we’re changing the doctrine (which might, for example, narrow the protection for visual marks if Google became a preferred source of evidence—I might be happy with that outcome even if dubious about the mechanism). We have a historical example of this evolution with judicial treatment of survey evidence and the introduction of a requirement of control groups, which had the practical effect of changing the percentage of consumers exposed to the allegedly infringing use that courts recognized as sufficient to show likely confusion. That’s probably the happiest story of doctrinal evolution, but the decision to shape the doctrine may be more normative than empirical, and that has to be kept in mind in all these discussions.
Beebe: two cultures—marketers on one side and lawyers on the other. Talking to marketers isn’t the same as talking to economists—who we talk to affects the law just as talking to economists affects patent law. Marketers say: confusion as to source isn’t interesting—let’s figure out how to measure dilution. Goes to slipperiness of models and constant push of law away from confusion as to source and towards confusion as to something else. Marketers: it’s not consumers search costs, but TM search costs: TM law is currently dedicated to minimizing the costs for TMs looking for consumers. Subjects are TMs/brands and objects are consumers; lawyers don’t yet admit that.
Sprigman: for Steckel: cognitive delay as dilution? When I get older, I get cognitively slower, have I diluted the mark? What’s the harm?
Steckel: when people get older: all associations are delayed, that’s what a control group is for. There is research showing that even for the most important of purchases—home, car, etc., that at any moment only 3-4 attributes are operative. People have limited info processing capabilities and as such you want to put your best pitch up front. New Coke debacle: New Coke tasted better, but people didn’t buy the product for its taste.
Sprigman: but there’s no falsity injected into associations through “dilution.” What you’ve posited, is substantive weakening of meaning, can see effect of that, but not new associations. Tarnishment story makes more sense, but is a huge First Amendment problem since in every other context you’re allowed to say “Victoria’s Secret sucks,” even as a competitor.
Steckel: you don’t buy that measuring reaction times captures notion of impairing distinctiveness.
Sprigman: need relevance in retail environment.
Steckel: by delaying reaction times, it bumps something from short term memory to long term memory, taking longer to evoke in world of limited attention.
McKenna: this is two cultures: lawyer wants to know where the associations are, with source 1 or source 2. Steckel is asking what associations will arise—that’s a mismatch. Substantive meaning of mark v. whether it will take longer to know whether I’m dealing with New Coke or Old Coke.
Sprigman: whose views count for the law? Typically we don’t impinge freedom of speech without harm.
RT: I wrote a whole article about this. Don’t agree with the characterization that delays correspond to shift from short term memory to long term memory. 160 milliseconds is not a long enough delay. This is an example of what happens to empirical work laundered by lawyers: it gets ramped up as more significant than it is in the translation; we regularly mistake statistical significance for practical significance.
Bechtold: Use of big data and limitations. One response: need more data. In some areas, this is true—initial interest confusion; we tried to test this and could’ve tested this w/right data. In general, we are only slowly seeing usable data. Fully agree that this is not a substitute for a theory of TM that is justified. Studies can help us find new theories/new effects. Spillover effects from unauthorized uses can benefit brand owner; no one has clear theoretical view of how this works psychologically or what TM lawyers should do w/ it.
Jeremy Sheff: should ask what questions empirical methods should be used to answer and that depends on our theory of TM law. Consumer psychology: what are we trying to measure in the minds of consumers? Marketing departments have been looking at these questions though not attuned to doctrine. Competition: if we think there are empirical questions, we could turn to competition/antitrust law. Look at effects on entry, prices, output, elasticity of demand. These aren’t being investigated right now. That could help make a case for a particular theory or explore our theoretical presumptions.
Orly Lobel: useful to think about this panel v. patents panel. Much has to do with whether we’re having the same conversations: does the theory map onto the work? Confusion seems like an instrumental, narrow goal—could it be consumer welfare, new entry, etc.? Current work seems defeatist, focused on what we have now on the books. This panel spoke to adjudicators: how to apply/interpret doctrinal mandate; previous panel was willing to talk about what the law should be. Maybe we just don’t know how to aggregate the effects of TMs. Or maybe we’ve seen more action on patent reform and thus had more demand for studies of bigger Qs.
McKenna: patent traditionally wanted to promote more output. TM traditionally just wanted to prohibit particular practices. Yet TM is used as a substitute for or complement to patent law; can be measured in terms of same effects. Antitrust people: don’t think TM has any effect on competition/any market power for brands. That’s bound up in history, but we need more study.
Chris Buccafusco: TM doesn’t start w/empirical assumptions about brains and decisions and then try to figure out harms; it starts w/assumptions about what bads are and tries to get evidence from social scientists. Mental map of associations is starting point of marketers, but not TM. Might be any number of conceptions of how consumers use brands; could be less cognitivist models. Might produce different sets of harms. His skepticism: TM owners want to find all the harms and use all possible theories of decisionmaking as long as they specify potentially compensable harms.
Gregory Mandel: move to the ought is useful; so is how the law is working on the ground, as the TM papers were focused on.
Scott Hemphill: clickstream data: you can see sometimes that people stayed only for 5-7 seconds. That’s a signal they didn’t get what they wanted. Could also get that from sequence of queries. Might be a way to detect brief confusion (though, RT notes, also self-refutes theory of harm to TM owners).
Irina Manta: not sure that association w/porn is the only way or even the most direct way to get at tarnishment. If you believe in the model, Victor’s Little Secret creates negative association, but people don’t remember why they have a negative association when they see VS again, it’s just a generalized dis-ease. Quality perception reduced; that should be actionable every time there’s no First Amendment protection, according to TM owners. (Of course, under Central Hudson, “every time there’s no First Amendment protection” means “every time there is a factually false statement about the TM owner in commercial speech,” which tarnishment is not.)
Steckel: hard to expose respondents to an experience that mimicks what happens in the market; simply asking them about associations w/porn may not do it.
Michael Meurer: there have been some market value studies about value of TMs. Not sure whether there are studies on market effects of TM litigation, but there could be.
McKenna: there are European economists who try to study relations to innovation, but there are many problems. First, they just measure TM applications which has correlation/causation problems.
Katherine Strandburg: Papers related to Abercrombie emphasized the importance of context in what consumers see. Google genericity case: court distinguished verb use from TM use. People use google generically as a verb but not as a source. Can we split the baby here, giving people more protection for the mark in a certain context, but less in other contexts where the use isn’t the same? Also, tension in Oullette paper: if you do a search and the first page is all about a particular TM, then she argues it’s distinctiveness. But wouldn’t that also suggest a lack of confusion? That seems perfectly sensible—a more distinctive mark might be less confusable.
Barton Beebe: TM says that stronger mark = greater scope of protection/more likely confusion is. If we abandoned that principle, the edifice would crumble. Some European courts have suggested that strength decreases likely confusion, but not American courts. (RT: I would say that individual US courts have occasionally reinvented this theory in parody/First Amendment cases, but haven’t made it coherent.)
McKenna: not about empirical reality, b/c empirical evidence supports Strandburg.
Brett Frischmann: Interesting empirical questions would challenge assumptions/theory of TM. Assumptions about stable/fixed preferences of consumers; examine way TMs enable producers to shape consumer preferences. What are the public harms from TM? Deadweight loss—how to measure in TM law? Chilling effects, speech values.
Empirical IP Research Conference, NYU
Plenary Session: How Do Patents Affect Innovation?
Facilitator: Katherine Strandburg (NYU)
Longer history of empirical work in patent, but still difficulty answering basic question of effect on innovation. In 1958, economist Fritz Machlup famously concluded that “none of the empirical evidence at our disposal” “either confirms or confutes the belief that the patent system has promoted the progress of the technical arts and the productivity of the economy.” Are we in a better position today?
Panelists: Heidi Williams (MIT Dep’t of Economics)
Topic: Measuring the Effects of Patents on Downstream Innovation, Commenting on: Alberto Galasso & Mark Schankerman, Patents and Cumulative Innovation: Causal Evidence from the Courts (2013)
How to patents on existing tech affect follow-on innovation? Two key challenges have hindered prior work: how can we construct an appropriate counterfactual? Can’t randomize patents for some tech and not others. Selection bias is a problem. Insight: lever CAFC judge assignment for variation in active patents; this experiment holds disclosure constant. Second challenge: measurement. What paper trail can measure follow-on innovation? Patent citations can’t be used to track innovation on tech that doesn’t receive patents. Using patent invalidations makes citations a feasible outcome.
Does invalidation change investment in follow-on innovation? No estimated effect on pharma cases, but Williams suggests that awareness of such cases and their likely outcome means that invalidation proceedings’ likelihood are already incorporated into investment decisions.
Economists have looked carefully at citations: hybrid corn patents, where yield of corn provides some measure of patent value. What are the citations measuring? Inventors and examiners cite a core set of patents that establish patentable subject matter (PSM) in an area—citations establish many things. Case could be cited more/less because it’s being used to define PSM—so that might not provide a measure of follow-on innovation.
Authors are aware of this, but note the difficulty of finding a measure of innovation—tried to collect non-citation measures of follow-on innovation: clinical trials for pharma—when a patent is invalidated, do you see more clinical trials on that active ingredient? Medical device registrations: if invalidated, do you see more medical devices measured by FDA registrations? Consistently w/citation results, they don’t see impact on clinical trials (though since these cases involve ANDAs there might not be new information revealed anyway); medical device data are more nuanced—new devices/generic versions of existing devices: when there’s an invalidation, you get more generic device registrations—substantially equivalent to product whose patent is invalidated. Not sure that this measures follow-on innovation; these don’t require licenses and may just reflect changes in competition.
Excellent empirical work; leaves open questions.
Stefan Bechtold (ETH Zurich)
Topic: The Effects of Patents on Scientific Research, Commenting on: Bhaven Sampat & Heidi L. Williams, How Do Patents Affect Follow-On Innovation? Evidence from the Human Genome
Try to identify variable correlated w/ explanatory variable but doesn’t suffer from causality/endogeneity problems of explanatory variable. Existing literature: IP rights without disclosure may reduce follow-on academic research/commercial development; with disclosure IP rights may reduce downstream innovation in computers, electronics, medical instruments, but not in drugs, chemicals, or mechanical technologies. Paper: do patents in human genes affect follow on innovation as measured by scientific research and product development?
Look at patent applications, both successful and unsuccessful. Gene sequences extracted from patent claims and linked to data on publication citation, clinical trials, and diagnostic tests. Endogeneity: genes claimed in patent applications may have different characteristics than genes are never claimed; inventors may file for more valuable technologies. Look then at successful v. unsuccessful applicants, as well as examiner variance. Random variation? In fact assignment isn’t random, but within art units it’s random; key question is whether successful and unsuccessful applications are similar at the time of application. Use leniency of individual patent examiner.
In general, no effect of gene patents on follow-on innovation. No decline or increase in follow-on publications and clinical trials.
What’s the relevance of the economist v. legal scholars? Lawyers know institutional details so they can figure out what might be causal.
Michael Meurer (Boston University)
Topic: Non-Patent Measures of Innovation, Commenting on: Petra Moser, Patents and Innovation: Evidence from Economic History, 27 J. Econ. Persp. 23 (2013)
Douglas North: emphasized secure property rights, rule of law for role in innovation in Industrial Revolution. Skeptics: with exception of James Watt, few prominent innovators profited from patents or even got them. Aggregate data on growth and availability of IP rights: methods of measuring patent strength are fairly crude, and there are problems of endogeneity: which came first—innovation or strong patent rights?
Harmonization has been effective today: Chinese patent system differs very little from American system in relevant ways—that gives an advantage to 19th c patent data where there’s a large amount of credibly exogenous variation in patent law; mostly domestic patenting prior to Paris Convention.
Besides aggregate data, there are case studies. Much work on collective invention/knowledge sharing in blast furnaces, high pressure steam engines, weaving machinery (learning by doing): ways to appropriate value by patents, trade secrets, or some form of open sharing—when it’s not necessary to get a patent to drive innovation and invention. Sewing machine, for example, was recombinant technology drawing on lots of previous innovations spread out over time. Research: patent pool seemed to decrease innovation; pool members seemed to innovate less. Evidence of maximum stitch rate: growing before pool, leveled out during pool, grew again after pool. No pool in England; controlling for variations across inventions, found significant dampening of R&D especially by US pool members. Previous economists looking at patent pools didn’t pay much attention to outsiders, but they played a big role—effective threats of patent litigation from pool pushed them to invent around. Is that normatively desirable? Wasteful duplication or better innovation? Others have explored patent patents, compulsory licenses, periodic table.
Comparability: Economists can be informed about institutional details with case studies that are contemporaneous; harder when your case studies are 150 years old. Archival research is also necessary.
Petra Moser (Stanford Dep’t of Economics)
Topic: Measuring the Effects of Patents on Private Incentives, Commenting on: James Bessen et al., The Costs and Benefits of United States Patents (2014)
Estimating private costs and benefits of US patents owned by publicly held firms. Event study approach to estimated losses suffered by alleged infringers 1984-2009; authors use market value regressions to estimate value of patent rents for publicly traded US firms. Findings: Total private costs exceed private benefits; excess costs increase over time surege in lawsuits (NPE, computers/communications patents, software and telecom); growth in private costs outstrips growth in lawsuits (lawsuits cost increases over time).
Lower bound estimates of costs according to paper: but that’s not precise enough for Moser—study measures effect of threat of filing law suit, but what happens when a firm wins or loses a lawsuit or unexpectedly has to defend? Innovation incentives: even if costs outweigh rents, if rents are given to those who don’t bear the costs, then innovation incentives could still be huge. Suggests looking at individual cases rather than aggregate evidence.
Differences across countries: use EPO patents to look at how differences in patent systems influence private costs and benefits. Considering US patent only: upper bound rent of $517,000 per patent 1979-2002, adding EPO patents gets you to $351,000 per patent.
Organization for Transformative Works fundraising drive
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likely confusion is irreparable after eBay
CFE Racing Products, Inc. v. BMF Wheels, Inc., 2 F. Supp. 3d 1029 (E.D. Mich. 2014)
The jury found trademark infringement but no damages and no intentional infringement. What should happen with requested injunctive relief? Here, the court finds irreparable harm due to likely confusion, while citing eBay. OK, then.
BMF used BMF Wheels as its mark for aluminum wheels for trucks and SUVs, and registered BMF Wheels as a word mark for same. CFE has a senior registered word mark for BMF on auto cylinder heads and clothing, and senior rights in an unregistered logo for black block letters that are slanted to the right, outlined in white and red on a black field.
BMF learned of CFE’s BMF brand in 2008, when business associates told him that another company was “ripping off” his logo. CFE’s president learned of BMF Wheels in 2011 when a friend saw a truck with BMF wheels at a race in California; the truck’s owner spoke to a racer CFE sponsored and told him, upon noticing the “BMF” logo on Panela’s car, that he had wheels made by the same company. (The chance of this coincidence is probably reduced by the colloquial meaning of “BMF,” the utility of the red-white-black color scheme in macho automotive endeavors, and the common use of tilting letters to convey an impression of speed. The result, however unintentional, was great similarity.) No vendor features both parties’ products, but BMF Wheels are sometimes sold or advertised in the same places as cylinder heads by other makers.
After eBay, what constitutes irreparable harm when a jury has found no damages? The court acknowledged that the jury found that the likely confusion didn’t lead to monetary loss, and thus CFE didn’t suffer “a loss of goodwill or injury to its general business reputation, or need to spend money on the cost of future corrective advertising.” But that didn’t mean there was no injury. “The plaintiff produced evidence that the confusion deprived it of the right to control its own business reputation. The value of a company’s reputation cannot be measured in damages; only an order to cease the infringing conduct can remedy that harm. The plaintiff has shown both irreparable harm and an inadequate remedy at law.”
RT: Of course, this reasoning functions identically to supposedly discarded presumptions of irreparable harm and of inadequate remedy at law. It is not “evidence”; it is syllogism. One could investigate the idea of “reputation” more closely. Are there kinds of likely confusion that don’t deprive the trademark owner of control over its reputation, even assuming that’s always irreparable harm? Yes: exactly the kinds of “confusion” trademark scholars have been decrying for years—initial interest confusion, permission/authorization confusion, a lot of association confusion: Irrelevant confusion. There are other things to be said about control over reputation (like: nobody wholly controls their own reputation; truthful comparative advertising can change a product’s reputation, suggesting that reputation in itself isn’t what we’re protecting, etc.) but even casual examination should show that this rationale can’t justify finding irreparable harm in every case that the doctrine allows a finding of likely confusion.
The court then dealt with the scope of the resulting injunction. Since the infringement wasn’t willful and didn’t result in financial harm, and the parties weren’t direct competitors, the court entered a limited injunction. Among other things, it barred BMF from using confusing logos; from using “BMF” except in the phrase “BMF Wheels” and then accompanied by a disclaimer of affiliation with BMF cylinder heads, CFE Racing, or any of CFE’s product lines; barred BMF from using the letters “BMF” on any product except wheels and rims; and barred BMF from using any websites, domain names, or social media that contain the letters “BMF” within the domain name or website address unless the letters were included in the phrase “BMF Wheels” and accompanied by the disclaimer.
The court declined to cancel BMF’s registration for BMF Wheels. Though the court said the registration had to be “limited,” its order appeared rather to limit BMF’s use of its registered mark to avoid the style, font and colors used by CFE, and to prevent its use except in connection with car wheels and rims, accompanied by a disclaimer.
Without intentional infringement, there was no basis for an attorney’s fee award under the Lanham Act, and the relevant state law required a plaintiff to “suffer[] loss” in order to get fees; the jury’s damages finding prevented that too.
The highs are too high: overdraft claims against HSBC continue in part
In re HSBC Bank, USA, N.A., Debit Card Overdraft Fee Litig., 1 F.Supp.3d 34 (E.D.N.Y. 2014)
This case involves more of the charming practice of low-to-high charge posting, causing consumers to rack up numerous $35 overdraft charges in a single day for using their debit cards, often to make small purchases. Plaintiffs alleged that HSBC failed to clearly disclose posting order and then aggregated several days’ worth of charges at once, didn’t advise consumers that they could opt out or alert them that a charge would result in an overdraft, and failed to post deposits in a timely manner, resulting in additional overdraft fees. Multiple cases were centralized as multidistrict litigation, resulting in a consolidated class action complaint.
HSBC argued preemption by federal banking law and regulations and the court rejected its claim. The feds allow high-to-low posting, but that doesn’t mean that misleading conduct in relation to such ordering is exempt from state regulation, as the relevant federal agency has specifically stated with respect to California’s UCL. However, “inasmuch as the Plaintiffs seek to impose liability on HSBC for the bank’s failure to sufficiently disclose its posting method, that argument is preempted.”
The court then found that the plaintiffs could only allege claims under a state’s consumer protection law if a named plaintiff had a sufficient connection to that state. That left only the laws of California and New York. The court commented that adding new named plaintiffs from different states to this case would be difficult in light of the discrepancies between the states’ laws.
While the breach of contract claims failed for want of a specific breached term and conversion claims failed because the money at issue was the bank’s once deposited, the claims for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing survived. New York §349 deceptive business practices claims were dismissed because plaintiffs didn’t identify overdraft fees charged within the three-year limitations period.
Rule 9(b) applied to the California statutory claims that depended on fraudulent conduct. The CLRA claims went because money isn’t a “good” or “service” under the CLRA, as required. However, plaintiffs stated a claim under the FAL by alleging that consumers wouldn’t understand HSBC’s statements about choosing the order in which to post transactions to mean that HSBC would hold transactions made over several days and then post them from high-to-low. Instead, “a reasonable consumer would expect to be able to accurately track his or her own expenditures to avoid overdraft charges. The Plaintiffs adequately allege that this is nearly impossible given HSBC’s overdraft and posting policies.” Likewise with the “fraudulent” prong of the UCL.
There’s an open question about what a consumer, as opposed to a competitor, alleging “unfairness” under the UCL must show—that the harm to the victim outweighs the utility of the defendant’s conduct, or that there’s violation of public policy as declared by specific constitutional, statutory, or regulatory provisions. Either way, plaintiffs stated a claim. Whether $35 was an insubstantial injury was a factual question; the court wouldn’t let a corporation escape liability just by spreading its unfairness out sufficiently over members of the public. And violation of the duty to act in good faith would violate public policy. Unlawfulness UCL claims therefore also survived.
Pleading standards for false advertising
Cocona, Inc. v. Singtex Industrial Co., 2014 WL 5072730, Civil Action 14-cv-01593 (D. Colo. Oct. 9, 2014)
Cocona created a process to use coconut particles in fabric, which is used for outdoor gear, to enhance odor control, moisture absorption, and UV protection. Singtex formerly made that fabric for Cocona, but then went into business selling a competing product made from coffee rather than coconut. Cocona sued for breach of contract, trade secret theft, unfair competition, and interference with contract. I won’t discuss the contract/trade secret claims, which survive the motion to dismiss, or the interference with contract claim, which goes because Cocona doesn’t identify specific contracts lost.
Cocona alleged that Singtex misrepresented the traits of S.Café and misrepresentated comparisons to Cocona’s product, claiming that S.Café provided odor absorption, ultraviolet protection, and moisture control and that S.Café could perform in a manner comparable to Cocona’s products despite its knowledge that S.Café didn’t have the same qualities.
Singtex argued that these allegations had to satisfy Rule 9(b), and that the alleged claims were merely puffery. Courts are split on applying Rule 9(b) to Lanham Act false advertising claims; some say yes because of the similarity to common law fraud, while others say no because, unlike the common law, the Lanham Act requires no scienter. But the leading Ninth Circuit case, Vess v. Ciba–Geigy Corp. USA, 317 F.3d 1097 (9th Cir. 2003), holds that Rule 9(b) can apply to either all of a claim or part of it, under three circumstances: (1) if fraud is an element of the claim; (2) if fraud isn’t an element, but the plaintiff nonetheless “allege[s] a unified course of fraudulent conduct and rel[ies] entirely on that course of conduct as the basis of a claim,” Rule 9(b) applies to “the pleading of that claim as a whole”; (3) if the plaintiff alleges some fraudulent and some nonfraudulent conduct that isn’t a unified course of conduct, only the allegations of fraud are subject to Rule 9(b). Thus, the court concluded, Rule 9(b) applies to Lanham Act false advertising claims only insofar as the factual averments allege intentional or knowing misrepresentations.
Thus, the court found, Rule 9(b) applied to one of Cocona’s theories, its false comparison claim, because Cocona alleged that Singtex knew that its products didn’t have performance equivalent to Cocona’s products when it claimed otherwise. But Cocona’s second theory involved only misleading statements about Singtex’s own products, and it didn’t allege knowledge in the narrative portion of the complaint. The factual allegations underlying this theory of recovery didn’t sound in fraud, so Rule 9(b) didn’t apply (even though there were general allegations about willfulness at the end of the complaint going to Cocona’s claim for relief). Comment: The Ninth Circuit approach has never struck me as sensible, since scienter is never a required element even if it’s alleged and so the plaintiff can win without proving anything about the defendant’s state of mind, but I’m not a civil procedure expert.
Cocona failed to plead the allegedly false comparisons with particularity. While it alleged that “Singtex has expressly compared S.Café products to Cocona’s proprietary yarn fabrics” and that “[u]pon information and belief, Singtex informed Cocona’s customers that the S.Café products provide the same performance qualities as Cocona’s proprietary products,” sporadic conversations aren’t commercial advertising or promotion. Even if the conversations reached enough of the market to constitute advertising, Cocona didn’t allege the “who, what, when, where and how of the alleged” falsehoods.
Cocona’s claims based on Singtex’s allegedly misleading representations about its own products’ qualities did suffice under Rule 8(a). It identified specific statements on Singtex’s website, which was unquestionably advertising or promotion, and alleged that they were false or misleading. It alleged lost sales, too. That was enough for plausibility.
Singtex argued that the challenged claims were mere puffery. But the challenged ads were statements of fact: according to the complaint, Singtex claimed that S.Café “utilizes coffee grounds’ natural ability to adsorb odors for a comfortable wearing experience. It also provides UV protection, and is very fast drying.” It allegedly relies on the spaces created within a green coffee bean as it expands during the roasting process for these “high performance” features. Likewise, the website claimed: “[w]ith our coffee ground permanently imbedded in the fiber, the particles work hard with controlling and absorbing odors. The trapped odors are then released with the [sic] your next wash-and-dry cycle of your S.Café clothing.” And for UV protection, the website said, “[w]ith S.Café fabric coffee particles in the fabric, these particles actually refract and diffuse the sun’s rays. This provides for a natural UV protection throughout all the S.Café fabric collection.”
These were specific factual statements. Though they didn’t explicitly provide any frame of reference, Cocona alleged that the statements could be measured by comparing Singtex’s performance against “a traditional polyester fiber that has not been treated with chemicals.” That sufficed to state a claim.
NFL Films protected by First Amendment against players’ right of publicity claims
Dryer v. National Football League, No. 09-2182 (D. Minn. Oct. 10, 2014)
There are two alternatives when it comes to the right of publicity, it seems to me. Either we will limp along with a special rule for video games despite the Supreme Court’s holding in Brown, or the Court will have to take a right of publicity case and explain what it meant in Zacchini. Given the Court’s tendency to use the First Amendment like Lochner, I’m not confident I’d be happy with the outcome of the latter, but I still think a national rule would be a much better idea than what we have now.
The three plaintiffs are retired football players who opted out of the NFL’s global settlement of former players’ claims. They alleged that the NFL’s use of video footage of them playing football violated their publicity rights, confused consumers about endorsement under the Lanham Act, and unjustly enriched the NFL. (The unjust unrichment claims fall with the rest and I won’t discuss them.)
Footage of games in which Dryer played for the Giants and the Rams appears in 47 different NFL Films productions. Thirty-two NFL Films productions include game footage in which plaintiff Bethea appears as a player for the Oilers, and 91 include footage from games in which plaintiff White played for the Vikings and the Chargers. Dryer and White lived in California at litigation time; Bethea lived in Texas.
“NFL Films productions are essentially compilations of clips of game footage into theme-based programs describing a football game or series of games and the players on the field.” But they’re more than just highlight reels; they’re artistic. They don’t use the TV broadcast cameras, but rather NFL Films-dedicated cameras whose operators choose how to best tell the story of the game. Most of the films at issue described a single game or season in a 20- to 30-minute narrative including music, narration, and clips in real time and slow motion. Some included interviews with players, including the three plaintiffs, who all participated in interviews after they retired. Each knew that the interview would be incorporated into NFL Films productions, and at least sometimes they signed waivers. Plaintiffs didn’t challenge the use of these interviews, but rather the use of the video footage of them playing football.
Although plaintiffs challenged 155 separate films, the court focused on representative samples (though they weren’t representative in that they were the ones in which footage including each plaintiff made up the highest percentage of total run time). For Dryer, a 24- minute production, “Game of the Week 1969 Week #1 Vikings vs. Giants” featured Dryer playing in 10% of its run time. “Using game footage and dramatic narration and music, the production showcases pivotal plays in a game between the Minnesota Vikings, one of the NFL’s most powerful teams at that time, and the New York Giants, who were welcoming a new coach after a poor showing in the 1968 season.” Dryer’s name wasn’t mentioned until more than 5 minutes in and was spoken only twice; you’d already have to know that he wore number 89 to identify him in the footage. “Most of his appearances in the production are fleeting, for mere seconds or fractions of seconds at a time, and are accompanied by narration discussing other players involved in the featured play. The production never focuses only on Dryer or his image; rather, he is always shown with his teammates in the context of a football play.”
Bethea’s story was basically similar, though he was featured for about one minute, with the narrator summing up: “Without any doubt, he is the best.” Many of his teammates received a similar one-minute treatment of their individual performances. For White, the clips with the highest percentage of footage featuring him were short (2 minutes or under). Otherwise his story was similar, except that he also appeared in a 10-second interview clip filmed after the game, identified by name and position on screen.
Previously, the court found that plaintiffs stated a claim for violation of the right of publicity (etc.), but after discovery was over—and after the dismissal of the class claims—the court found that matters had changed. Its job was to balance plaintiffs’ “rights to profit from their own likenesses” with the NFL’s free speech rights. The court determined that the proper starting point was to determine whether the NFL films were commercial or noncommercial speech. Plaintiffs didn’t dispute that, if the films were noncommercial, their claims failed (interesting, given Zacchini, and also not entirely how the analysis proceeds).
Whether speech is commercial is a question of law. There’s no bright line, but key considerations include (1) whether the speech is an advertisement, (2) whether it refers to a specific product, and (3) the speaker’s economic motivation for the speech. None alone makes speech commercial, and not all three are necessary, but the combination is good evidence of commerciality.
Advertising: Plaintiffs argued that NFL admitted that its films were advertising by equating them to a $350 million or larger ad budget in two Powerpoints. “But the fact that NFL Films productions generate substantial goodwill for the NFL is not itself dispositive of the issue whether the productions themselves are advertising.” Still, speech need not explicitly propose a commercial transaction to be advertising. These films didn’t offer to sell anything or encourage viewers to buy anything, but they still enhanced the NFL’s brand. An ad can be commercial speech if it is just brand advertising. See Jordan v. Jewel.
But, while the brand-enhancement theory was attractive, it didn’t work in this context. While brand enhancement can be an element of advertising, brand enhancement alone isn’t enough to render a film advertising. This wasn’t like the ad in Jordan, which was an ad bought by the defendant appearing in a sports magazine and which was “easily distinguishable from the magazine’s editorial content.” Here, by contrast, the films don’t appear in other media as paid spots—they are the content. The NFL doesn’t pay TV networks to broadcast the films; the networks pay the NFL for the rights, and other advertisers pay to have their ads inserted.
Nor did the films “exploit players’ images for the singular purpose of brand enhancement or other commercial gain.” Instead, they tell a story about a game, a team, or even a player: they’re “a history lesson of NFL football.” And the only way to tell such stories is by showing footage of the game—“the players, the coaches, the referees, and even the fans.” The NFL was drawing benefit not from the likenesses of individual players but from “the drama of the game itself, something that the NFL is certainly entitled to do.” There was no way to visually retell these stories without the use of footage of NFL players playing. Thus, the use was not for commercial advantage, but “because the game cannot be described visually any other way.”
Despite brand enhancement, then, these films weren’t ads. Comment: This has to be the case if the New York Times is not to be a commercial speaker when it publishes its most important stories: Publishing the Pentagon Papers and portions of the Wikileaks documents, or Judith Miller’s Iraq reporting, undoubtedly was extremely important to the NYT’s brand, for good or ill. The NYT certainly takes into account the question of “what kind of stories do we publish as part of our mission to be the paper of record?” when it makes decisions at that level. That’s branding, among other things.
Product reference: Plaintiffs argued that the productions referred to the NFL as a product, as in Facenda v. NFL Films, Inc., 542 F.3d 1007 (3d Cir. 2008). But that involved a film the court determined to be an infomercial for a different creative work: it referenced an NFL videogame with a countdown clock until the game’s release, and it was broadcast only in the few days before the release, like a film trailer. Here, the films didn’t promote a product separate from themselves. And there was no other way to tell the story of NFL games and players without footage.
Economic motivation: Of course there was an economic motive, but that wasn’t dispositive in the absence of the other elements. Publishing expressive works for profit doesn’t take them out of full First Amendment protection. “This is not commercial speech; it is capitalism.”
Because the films were fully protected speech, plaintiffs’ claims failed.
The court proceeded, however, to do the more ad hoc balancing in other right of publicity cases, then an analysis of the relevant states’ rights of publicity, many of which incorporate at least some First Amendment-protective limits on their initial definitions. For balancing, the court focused on previous athlete right of publicity cases not involving video games, for obvious reasons: C.B.C. Distrib. & Mktg., Inc. v. Major League Baseball Advanced Media, L.P., 505 F.3d 818 (8th Cir. 2007) (fantasy baseball); CBS Interactive Inc. v. Nat’l Football League Players Ass’n, Inc., 259 F.R.D. 398 (D. Minn. 2009) (fantasy football with images); and Gionfriddo v. Major League Baseball, 114 Cal. Rptr. 2d 307 (Cal. Ct. App. 2001) (video clips of former players playing). All three cases found that the free speech interests of the respective speakers outweighed the athletes’ publicity rights, with Gionfriddo holding that it was permissible to use images of players playing to advertise the game of baseball; the line would be drawn if MLB tried to use the players’ images to sell an unrelated product.
The court previously denied a motion to dismiss based on these cases on the theory that the data and images in those cases were all in the “public domain,” unlike the NFL video footage, which the NFL protects vigorously. But plaintiffs, having had a chance to develop the record, didn’t show that the uses of which they complained were truly different from the uses in those cases. Specifically, plaintiffs didn’t explain how the NFL’s copyrights stripped protection from its films. (Note: this distinction was always nonsense on the facts as well as the law. CBS and Gionfriddo obviously involved footage/pictures still in copyright, even if those copyrights were not owned by the leagues at issue. Separately, I can’t imagine the Supreme Court distinguishing between an authorized use of copyrighted works and a use of public domain works for purposes of First Amendment protection of the use.)
Reviewing the films, it was clear that the challenged uses were akin to the use of footage in sports news broadcasts. Thus, balancing the news-like uses against the players’ publicity rights, the players’ economic interests weren’t strong and were outweighed by the public interest inf ree dissemination of information about sports history. After all, the right of publicity exists to provide incentives, and the players were already paid for their participation.
Anyway, even if the films were commercial speech, the plaintiffs failed on the merits of their claims. The court initially declined to apply New Jersey law just because NFL Films was headquartered there.
California has expansive statutory and common-law rights of publicity; Texas has only the common law; Minnesota has a common-law right that doesn’t require a commercial purpose or a pecuniary benefit (and is therefore super duper unconstitutional, but no worries!); and New York has only the statutory right, which requires written permission for advertising uses.
The NFL argued that each state recognized an exception for newsworthiness. E.g., Texas actually defines the right to be for uses that aren’t newsworthy or incidental. California excludes from its common-law protection the publication of matters in the public interest, and the statute exempts uses “in connection with any news, public affairs, or sports broadcast or account.” Newsworthiness is often determined as a matter of law.
California: it was clear that the films were “a means for obtaining information about real-world football games,” and are therefore “publishing or reporting factual data” within the meaning of the California newsworthiness defenses. The use of music, narration, and camera angles might “dramatize” the games, but they still conveyed true information about real-world games. This was of public interest and related to news—factual reports about pro athletes’ performance are of great interest to the public.
Texas: Texas newsworthiness is likewise broad “and extends beyond subjects of political or public affairs to all matters of the kind customarily regarded as ‘news’ and all matters giving information to the public for purposes of education, amusement or enlightenment, where the public may reasonably be expected to have a legitimate interest in what is published.” Plaintiffs argued that the defense was limited to uses that are “legitimately necessary,” but that didn’t matter, because using plaintiffs’ images was “the only way for the NFL to visually inform the public about historical football games. Thus, that use is ‘legitimately necessary’ to provide the public with a visual record of the NFL’s past.”
Minnesota: Plaintiffs argued that Minnesota didn’t recognize a newsworthiness defense, but the NFL argued that state courts applied a public-interest exception to similar privacy-related claims, and that the Minnesota Supreme Court’s reliance on the Restatement to formulate privacy claims meant that the Restatement news exceptions to the right of publicity ought to apply. Given that newsworthiness is a First Amendment-related privilege, the court found it credible that Minnesota courts would apply it to publicity claims.
New York: New York also limits its statutory right to non-newsworthy publications, and the newsworthiness exception “should be liberally applied.” The right is only triggered when there’s no real relationship between the plaintiff’s image and its use, or where the use is an ad in disguise. That wasn’t so here.
Separately, the NFL argued that plaintiffs explicitly or implicitly consented to the NFL’s use of game footage. While that doesn’t matter in New York, which requires writtenconsent, the other states make lack of consent an element of a claim; consent wouldn’t bar the claims but would prevent plaintiffs from recovering pre-suit damages. The record showed that the plaintiffs all knew that NFL Films “regularly captured game footage and used that game footage in subsequent productions.” Plus, each plaintiff voluntarily appeared in these films by giving interviews to NFL Films; though they didn’t challenge the use of the interviews, it was apparent that they consented to the use of the game footage too. For example, Dryer testified that he “never thought [the NFL was] wrong” in showing game footage in NFL Films productions, and believed that NFL Films had the right to show game footage, including images of him playing football: “It’s their company.” Bethea “just was glad to be interviewed.”
The court then put on suspenders that are more likely to be snapped then the belt to be unbuckled: it found copyright preemption under §301. (This should really be conflict preemption; courts’ insistence on using §301 has been the source of much incoherence.) Section 301 applies if (1) the disputed work is within the subject matter of copyright; and (2) the state-law-created right is equivalent to any of the exclusive rights within the general scope of the Act.
On the motion to dismiss, the court had ruled that plaintiffs plausibly alleged that the “work” at issue was their identities, and thus there was no preemption. But the full record didn’t show that. Instead, the “works” plaintiffs challenged were films featuring game footage of them playing football. Plaintiffs argued that athletic events aren’t copyrightable, making their appearances not within the subject matter of copyright. But the works here weren’t the games, but rather video recordings of games, which are beyond peradventure within the subject matter of copyright. Their likenesses can’t be detached from the copyrighted performances contained in the films.
In addition, the court took account of two intervening decisions on the issue of whether the right of publicity was equivalent to any exclusive copyright right. Ray v. ESPN, Inc., No. 13-1179, 2014 WL 2766187 (W.D. Mo. Apr. 8, 2014); Somerson v. McMahon, 956 F. Supp. 2d 1345 (N.D. Ga. 2012). Both cases involved pro wrestlers challenging the rebroadcast of their wrestling performances; both cases found preemption. A performance that’s fixed with the permission of the performer is copyrightable; later objection to the republication of that performance in a non-advertising use is a matter for copyright law, not the right of publicity. “In other words, a claim for a violation of the right to publicity against a copyrighted work will lie only if that work is used for advertising, not in an expressive work.”
Comment: This comes straight from McCarthy, and while I applaud the result I abhor the reasoning. (1) For copyright purposes, the athletes here weren’t performers/authors because the game itself wasn’t copyrightable; the authors were the ones making decisions about the footage, not about the plays; the court here even quotes language from the legislative history to that effect. The players consented to appear, but even under Garcia they’re probably not authors. (2) Where does that “non-advertising” limit come from? Certainly not from the work or from the copyright right, which is not limited to non-advertising uses. Drawing the line at advertising is conflict preemption reasoning and has nothing to do with §301. More on this in a forthcoming article.
Given that the films weren’t ads and the recordings were made with plaintiffs’ permission, the claims were preempted. Plaintiffs didn’t argue that the NFL couldn’t use the original game broadcast by showing it in full if it so chose. Instead, they argued that use in a new work violated the right of publicity. But the new work was likewise covered by copyright law. Plaintiffs’ likenesses couldn’t be detached from the copyrighted performance, which the NFL had the right to exploit in expressive works. (Also, since when is an ad not an expressive work? Poor conceptualization tends to build upon itself.)
Finally, §43(a) false endorsement: In the Eighth Circuit, the Lanham Act only applies to commercial speech, so we’re done here. The court declined to adopt Rogers v. Grimaldi. But it did say that, even if the films were commercial speech, there was nothing false or misleading in them: they showed plaintiffs playing football. “This use of game footage as game footage cannot, as a matter of law, cause confusion or mistake or deceive anyone as to Plaintiffs’ affiliation with the NFL.” They were affiliated with the NFL. Dryer was even filmed at the time of production of one film wearing his Giants jersey. “If Dryer was truly concerned about creating an impression that he endorses the NFL, he would not have agreed to be filmed wearing NFL trademarks in 2006, a mere three years before the filing of this lawsuit.”
And furthermore, the court found laches. Nearly all of the films at issue were made years or even decades before plaintiffs sued. A delay of more than six years raises a presumption of laches. Plaintiffs didn’t provide evidence excusing their delay. The fact that, until approached by counsel, they didn’t know they might have a claim was irrelevant—ignorance of the law was no excuse. The NFL didn’t need to show prejudice given the length of delay, but it did so: “Bethea’s deposition alone illustrates the harm the long delay caused to witnesses’ memories. Bethea testified that he could not remember details of an interview he gave to NFL Films in 2007. That memories of events stretching back to the late 1960s would similarly be affected seems self-evident.” Plaintiffs argued that the NFL’s intentional infringement precluded equitable defenses like laches. But the NFL was merely exploiting its copyrights, and “correctly cautioned others that the use of game footage for other purposes might impinge players’ publicity rights because commercial use of player identities is not within either the NFL’s copyright or the First Amendment.”
AU trademark works in progress day 2
Dan Hunter (with Irene Calboli), Trademark Proliferation
Concerns about too many marks. They’re extremely weak as a result. It’s easy to get a descriptive mark on the primary register w/o secondary meaning. Also: many “marks” don’t seem distinctive as to source. They’re recognizable, but not distinctive as to source; those aren’t the same thing. So how did they get on the register? Same proliferation in every country.
This is about distinctiveness. Much focus has been on infringement, but wanting to go back to the beginning and address proliferation of weak marks. Our characterizations of inherent distinctiveness are underexplained: whyis an arbitrary or fanciful word source-identifying rather than simply being unique within a symbolic system? The other part is secondary meaning, where it’s even worse. Types of marks have been expanded radically to include color, etc., and we accept that sound/touch/etc. can be distinctive with secondary meaning. Again, that doesn’t make a lot of sense. Recognizing something as a mark doesn’t mean we recognize it as source distinctive, especially for merchandising right—Yankees on hats.
Cognitive science literature: System 1 is immediate and not thoughtful; System 2 is thoughtful but lazy. Oftentimes we answer the System 1 question, is this thing recognizable, when we’re supposed to answer the System 2 question, is this thing identifying a source? Splitting those apart is the point of the paper.
Poor theory of distinctiveness + incredibly strong rights = trademark proliferation, land grab for expressive components of society b/c it’s in their interests to do so. What can we do to fix it? Not sure it’s fixable.
Irene Calboli: statutory definition requires merely difference from genericity and recognizability: that’s extremely broad. TTAB is reluctant to recognize aesthetic functionality. One possibility: nobody needs more than one name per product, not taglines/colors/etc.
Hinchcliffe: Breaking circularity: what is the motivating rationale of the article? What impact on the modern TM regime do you want?
Hunter: Fixing it is very hard, but we want to explore the idea of why there are so many things not functioning as trademarks that are legally recognized as trademarks. A reduced number of marks might make it easier to believe that things recognized as marks are marks—from the theoretical to the simplest (if unlikely).
Calboli: Judges could have some reason to say a mark isn’t distinctive. To try to raise the bar can be useful. We have lots of defenses, but they come in too late if at all. Too many people are grabbing aesthetics. Likes strong rights, but strong rights for limited numbers of marks.
Cathay Smith: would it help if all marks had to show secondary meaning regardless of Abercrombiecategorization?
Hunter: secondary meaning as to source distinctiveness, but he doesn’t know how to prove that. Doesn’t know how to demonstrate that when I recognize Exxon, that I’m identifying it with source as opposed to being able to pick it out of a lineup. If we could craft relevant instruments, then asking for secondary meaning would help.
Calboli: the nature of TM is to be subjective, but there are some instances where you could get rid of the protection. Should be more than aesthetic—TM is not the right law to use. Perhaps there should be case for sui generis protection to avoid land grab.
RT: Judge Leval’s claims in J&J v. P&G: an example of the problem? He thought that requiring secondary meaning evidence more often could help. But cf. Lisa Ramsey (making the argument that only arbitrary etc. marks should be protected, not descriptive marks at all). Bone/Wal-Mart on error costs: source identification is expensive to determine, which I think the paper is clear about in struggling w/solutions. Rock & Roll Hall of Fame case does try to split it apart for particular reasons having to do with protecting free expression.
But why aren’t consumers also likely to do the same cognitive processing when they encounter the mark and conflate the two, even when making a purchasing decision? Laziness is often a characterization of consumers relied on by trademark expansionists, see Ann Bartow on visions of the consumer in TM. Why aren’t good plaintiffs’ confusion surveys evidence that people are identifying a mark with a source, not just recognizing it? We are trained for recognition of marks and it’s hard to distinguish that from recognizing source: are you really just objecting to the merchandising right? I recognize Crest as a source for toothpaste and that’s why I buy, but that’s not true for all uses of marks. TTAB case on jean pockets where the applicant argues that pockets have become a place where consumers expect marks.
Can your claims be reconciled w/the statute and its claim about anonymous source? Cf. 4thcircuit’s AOL v. AT&T, where the court says the registration makes summary judgment impossible despite extensive evidence of descriptiveness. Design patents/design rights are the sui generis protection Calboli wants, aren’t they? Mark McKenna on channeling doctrines.
Hunter: why aren’t consumers doing the same sorts of things as the maximalists? That’s the key question. We do rely on Crest; it’s extremely well known. One thing you could say is that well-known marks that have in fact met people’s preferences will work as source identifiers. There must be some marks that are source identifying. But wants to contest the idea that just because we’re trained to recognize marks, we’re trained to recognize source for the ones at the middle/the ones at the bottom that are the starting point of our article. The reason the marks strike us as bizarre is that they’re overreaching; trying to protect too small a component or trying to protect aesthetic appeal. So consumers are lazy and we do recognize some things as delivering consistent quality; not all marks are problematic. Confusion surveys: what is the role of confusion? Also there are many issues with poorly drafted surveys. Look at the surveys that have been accepted as appropriate.
Calboli: Crest is a working mark. To her the problem is that the “mark” has to be distinctive—she has no problem w/anonymous source if it works. The problem is nontraditional trademarks and proliferation/extension into areas where no mark should exist. It’s possible because of the idea of distinctiveness from the broad wording of the statute, even when the thing is decorating/embellishing the product. The answer may be really expanding the functionality doctrine. Too hesitant
RT: Sounds to me like expanding the concept of de facto secondary meaning. De facto distinctiveness but not de jure distinctiveness? (Calling it secondary meaning already obscures what’s going on—it’s a disavowal of what we’re saying, which is that some symbol is functioning the way we ordinarily expect a mark to function, but we’re still not going to protect it for competitive reasons.)
Grinvald: David Barnes makes a similar argument from a marketing perspective. Add more on Beebe’s semiotic analysis.
Hunter: if what we’re saying is right, then semiotics doesn’t provide the answers Beebe wants to provide. The semiotic turn doesn’t provide us with analytical framework to make the sorting move we want to make. [Barton, feel free to call!]
Colman: not sure you need to reject Beebe to accomplish what you want. He talks about failure of Abercrombiescheme for not identifying what kindof distinctiveness a mark has come to represent: distinguishes source distinctiveness from differential distinctiveness. What you want beyond that is empirical data. [discussion of Louboutin]
Hunter: It’s not about a new normative foundation: something that is distinctive as to source should give entitlements to the rights we want TM to have. But right now we’re recognizing marks at too early in the process.
Colman: Calboli seems to say that people are grabbing aesthetic elements—even if people recognize the Bottega leather weave they shouldn’t have rights over it.
Calboli: these can coexist. We should exclude types from the register, and even within that some marks could fit within the proper definition of distinctiveness but aren’t. Most slogans aren’t serving a distinctive function—you might recognize them, but if I said “let’s go to [Home Depot’s slogan instead of Home Depot’s name]” you’d have no idea where I meant.
LaFrance: suggest ways of empirical testing the concept of source identification. SCt in Wal-Mart says consumers are trained to recognize words, not packages—that isn’t based on empirical evidence, but it has intuitive power. Plausible that some things, such as fanciful words, immediately lead to conclusion that these are marks. Testing that empirically should be impossible. One mark per product: sub-product lines are important in practice.
Farley: this isn’t really a paper about TM proliferation. It’s really about distinctiveness. That’s supposed to be the main function of trademarks, and you’re asking what it is. SCt punted on the applicability of Abercrombie to word marks even though courts were struggling with its application to trade dress. Landscape Forms: the parties go up and down the court system and the courts have a huge problem figuring out how to ask the question of distinctiveness—the test ends up avoiding any real issue of source identification. What does the consumer do with the information “Green Giant” on a can of peas? J. Friendly thinks that it doesn’t identify the content of the can, or the price of the product, and consumer then tries to make sense of it: it must be a brand.
TM proliferation takes us so far from that can of peas. Proliferation in itself could undermine consumers’ ability to understand the visual presentation they encounter. Wal-Mart also went in the same direction: how do consumers interpret what they encounter by default. But now we’re being so overwhelmed with sense/inputs that we couldn’t possibly regard them all as source identifiers. [Now I want to bring in Grice’s theory of implicature as an explanation of what consumers might take away from a symbol.] We need to give direction to judges about which survey questions are the right ones: not top of mind recall.
Colman: distinctiveness has gone from being necessary to being sufficient and you want to take it back. May be confusing to introduce the Louboutin red sole/Bottega weave which gets into aesthetic functionality—slogans or other examples might make your target clearer.
Mary LaFrance, False Advertising Claims against Product Names and Labels
Pom Wonderful as jumping off point: decided correctly, but opens the door to great uncertainty about what in the future will constitute sufficient accuracy in product names/labels to avoid liability for false advertising. FDA rules are a floor, not a ceiling. Most examples involve consumable goods—food, beverages, supplements, drugs.
State laws: preemption status isn’t clear for unfair competition, if a remedy would require inconsistency w/FDA labeling requirements, but Lanham Act false advertising claims aren’t precluded. Juicy Fruit gum: could that be misleading even though it doesn’t have juice or fruit? We don’t know what the standard is, which creates uncertainty. That may prompt more detailed disclosure. Also, since only competitors have standing and not consumers, they all live in glass houses, so they may be hesitant to sue because they live in glass houses. Consumer suits are already going on and won’t be affected much by Pom; the possibility of frivolous lawsuits like the one against Crunch Berries is already available. Greater risk of misleadingness by name versus label? Most people don’t look at the ingredients list. Williams v. Gerber, the court said: just because the FDA imposes regulations requiring listing ingredients shouldn’t give leeway to be misleading in the name of the product. Implies strict standards for names. Yet our experience w/product names like Juicy Fruit may make us inherently skeptical about product contents based on name versus other things on the label—but children may be relevant consumers.
Registration: deceptive marks are unregistrable, which is a disincentive. But deceptively misdescriptive marks are registrable, and could be misleading even if ruled not deceptive by PTO. Suggestive marks could also be deceptive to some consumers, yet we treat them as inherently distinctive.
Colman: care or sophistication of consumer may make a big difference with suggestive marks. Vulnerable/gullible consumers are protected under California state law. While federal judges are ad hoc about consumer competency, they are more regularized under California UCL. [I think everybody tends to think that the body of law they study is more incoherent/has more conflicting cases than other bodies of law—I know I’m not immune. Law is fractal!]
Broader question of interaction of Lanham Act with other federal laws—he thinks there should be a presumption of aesthetic functionality from the existence of a design patent, but courts don’t pay attention to that.
LaFrance: true that courts don’t think about interactions enough. Thus the possible preemptive effect of the FDA scheme over general state unfair competition laws is so unsettled right now.
Grinvald: Images are really problematic! Especially w/vulnerable populations or people who aren’t going to read the label. Uncertainty as a good thing: forces advertisers to take labeling seriously. “Made in USA” as another particularly hot area. Competitor lawsuits: is that a good thing that they’re just between competitors? In-house, we were willing to sue even though it was expensive and even though we could only get injunctive relief if the ad was bad enough for us. Not really on behalf of consumers. Why don’t consumers have standing?
LaFrance: companies should generally ensure they have their own houses in order before they sue.
Grinvald: depends on where the ad is. If other competitors were already looking at you and sending C&Ds, not much of a deterrent.
RT: (1) Doesn’t seem like a name-specific problem. Pom’s claim was also based on the fruit vignette. We do know what the standard is: don’t be false or misleading, which would be the same regardless of where the claim was made. You suggest there might be a consumer predisposition to discount names compared to other claims. There’s a huge amount of marketing literature on this; e.g., study about slogans’ directness versus brand names’, or images versus words.
(2) I don’t think the Court was at all uncertain whether Pomegranate Blueberry was the name; it was uncertain about what other words were part of the name. (The briefs and the oral argument, I think, support this.) Relatedly: My advice is to include a picture where possible in your discussion. Note that Pom had issues w/its own Pomegranate Blueberry juice not being 100% those juices, though it was a lot closer.
(3) The effect of name/label being on package on class action standing/ascertainability/other issues. Makes a class action more plausible than other marketing elements, especially ads detached from the product itself.
(4) Boris v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 2014 WL 1477404 (C.D. Cal. Apr. 9, 2014): Plaintiffs sued Wal-Mart for deceptively marketing Equate Migraine and Equate Extra Strength Headache Relief (Equate ES); the different names were a key part of the claim.
Smith: Should there be different standards for names versus other elements? May draw consumers in.
Hunter: Do you have a theory? What’s going on descriptively is of interest, but is there a normative or grand descriptive way of understanding what’s going on.
LaFrance: for now, it’s that uncertainty is not a bad thing, but we can’t have a standardless rule. We need a rule for testing names/labels, and should know whether the standards are different for names based on what our goals are.
More interaction between TM and false advertising: what do we mean by deceptive?
Hinchcliffe: connection to geographic indications as well. Wine law could benefit from this research. Address anticompetitive issues.
LaFrance: if companies feel they need more surveys to determine how name will be perceived, that’s expensive and may be difficult for new entrants. But you can save the money if your label is painfully honest. But maybe that puts you at a disadvantage to a company with survey evidence that consumers aren’t fooled.
Calboli: we tend to protect companies over their consumers once there’s distinctiveness. Stronger false advertising laws/labeling laws in Europe; class actions are different. We have cases like LOVEE LAMB (misleading), but otherwise we try to save the mark rather than consumers and use other tools than TM. Food regulations: what the consumer gets may diverge, since they think that “organic” means “free range” but it doesn’t.
Farley: interested in consumer skepticism. To what extent do these areas of law address that? BATF regulations of alcohol, different from TM standards.
[discussion of consumer skepticism and its malleability or lack thereof (my position: it’s not very malleable; general characteristics like age and education are far more important than any learning that goes on, but there are substantial individual differences that make it hard to figure out how that might apply to the law since both high-skepticism and low-skepticism people buy yogurt). If labeling something as cheaper makes it perform worse (as some research indicates), then one implication is that grey market goods correctly labeled as imported are always materially different because they’re likely to be perceived as performing differently. I’m cool with that because I don’t think material difference is an appropriate standard for liability as long as the consumer knows the truth.]
Sarah Hinchliffe, Scandalous Marks
Genesis of the project: Aust’l mark Nucking Futs for nuts. How did that happen? How well does the TM regime deal with scandalous marks? (Not at all well.) Relatively easy to register an offensive mark compared to the US, which seems more conservative. Unique cultural considerations. Courts often depart from the guidelines used by the TM Office.
European region has more coherent framework for denying “immoral” registrations, balancing moral considerations with the right to free expression. Harmonization in the internal market; right of the public not to be confronted with disturbing/threatening marks. More conservative than US. But still no clear tangible test for the application of the relevant ban. Seeks to fill this gap.
Ways to improve the system: Need compliance w/human rights rules; personal views of the tribunal ought to be irrelevant. The legality of the use of the mark is a relevant consideration. Need a generally morally accepted principle which the use of the mark would genuinely contravene. Mere offense should not be enough. Threat/attack is more likely to be scandalous than nonthreatening mark.
Hunter: always a risk in comparative law: pure descriptiveness. Differences may be attributed to culture. Different recommendations will be objectionable in different jurisdictions: why? What is the normative foundation you’re shooting for? If there is a problem—and maybe the problems differ by jurisdiction—what grand normative theory if any can apply?
Calboli: values of free speech are being exported; more attention to racial issues? Also, because of internationalization something that was offensive in one place might become offensive in other places. (Paper has example of Redskins raspberry candy in Austl.; used to have a caricature of an American Indian on the package, now just the name.) Could this be part of internationalization/drawing from other cases?
Smith: interesting that there’s no provision for disparaging marks separately.
Hinchcliffe: offending a segment of the community can be sufficient to reject. PHAT PHUK for a Thai restaurant. Maybe there’s so much difference in meaning that harmonization is impossible.
LaFrance: why even try for harmonization? Int’l marketing might require least common denominator; is that a problem.
RT: connection to territoriality. Graeme Dinwoodie’s work? Lionel Bently’s current work on internationalization of UK marks to India. Exceptionalism and exceptionability. The transmission of meaning across borders and its relationship to attempts to prevent the change of meaning within borders. Distinctively Australian culture? If we are committed to territoriality, then scandalousness actually fits well within that aspect of a TM system, whose commitments are orthogonal to consumer/producer protection.
Colman: any comparison to unrelated countries like Italy and China? Is there similarity, and if so why? (TM with Chinese characteristics?)
LaFrance: are there differences between registration-only and strong common-law systems? Is one more liberal than the other? If registration is very important to rights, the system might be more forgiving, while a common-law jurisdiction could say you can still use the mark.
Farley: international obligations: the prohibition on scandalousness is allowed as an exception to the general rule of registrability required by treaties, but compare 6terwhich is us all agreeing not to register flags and emblems—it’s not a flexibility. What’s going on there? Is there an issue of universality? Consider also creating categories instead of factors to consider. In the new gTLD program, there was a prohibition on morally offensive gTLDs. That’s a universal norm, so they tried to figure out what a universal, bare-bones standard was: the incitement to or promotion of violence, discrimination, or child pornography—this was categorical. In addition: equally generally accepted identified legal norms. That’s an interesting approach.
AU TM works in progress part 2
Cathay Smith, Immoral Trademarks
Abusive challenges: Dykes on Bikes, Squeezebloodfromturnips.com (opposer was angry because he was getting calls from the collection agency that was the applicant); Adultfriendfinder (opposer was a pastor who objected that the applicant was connecting men with loose women; seems sexist)—objecting to the nature of the service and not to the name. You’re supposed to examine the mark, not the commercial use of the mark. Objecting to the applicant’s business activities, political views, other activities.
Other types of cases: vulgar parodies, like SEX ROD, or the defecating greyhound. Those were the only two types of oppositions she found. Avoided disparaging TM cases: the standard for opposition is very different and the type of harm is very different; doesn’t see harm from immoral/scandalous marks.
Get rid of the bar entirely? Stop refusing through the examiners and only assess when there’s an opposition? Maybe it’s just a standing problem—who should have standing? Because of the problems w/the concepts, leaning towards taking it out.
Hinchcliffe: Literature on different terms we might use for the concept. Replace term? Define it? What are the benefits/flaws of current systems? Will procedural or substantive changes address those flaws?
Colman: do 1A issues differ depending on whether it’s the examiner or inter partes? Reminds him of racially restrictive covenants: the court’s determination of state action in enforcement of rights.
Smith: originally, saw it as more of an examiner issue. But not sure about it.
Hunter: what next? What is the grand claim? [Discussion of what law reviews are looking for.] Most obvious claim: where gov’t acts to grant or deny property interests there are constitutional implications. So how do we get through that minefield? Have others done that for immoral marks? [A fair amount, including Megan Carpenter and Christine Haight Farley.] Could say “dismantle everything in TM that doesn’t involve reputation or confusion, including registering name during life of president or his widow.” Either a grand constitutional leap, or say get the gov’t out of these particular things.
Grinvald: get the examiner out. Problems w/private actors are different. Stealth censorship.
LaFrance: some people are deeply offended by these symbols. To the extent that granting registrations encourages their adoption because of registration’s benefits, that’s relevant. Sure, the TM system’s purpose isn’t to protect morals, but any statutory scheme may aim to avoid promoting behavior that’s harmful to children (seeing stuff on billboards) or deeply offensive. Don’t undervalue notion of protecting morals.
RT: If you don’t want to deal w/disparaging marks, making claims about getting the gov’t out of the business of evaluating marks on a non-reputation-based metric is a difficult task. Underlying Q of what TM is for. Renna v. County of Union: TM is forcommercial activities, thus exclusion of state insignia is justified.
Underlying Q about role of variation in PTO proceedings. Black letter: can’t use results in other cases as factual support for results in your case. But is that rule justified? Do its cracks show especially when you get to 2(a) issues where the issues are both random and systematic (in that what is offensive tends to be related to sex, defecation, violence). Due process may be especially relevant in this circumstance. (Carol Rose on Shelly v. Kraemer has a lot to say about state enforcement of cultural beliefs; NYT v. Sullivan is a relevant 1A precedent: state enforcement of a state-granted right is state action.)
Farley: TTAB judge spoke on her own behalf and said that the PTO is absolutely consistent on “shit.” Can you explain why you’re separating morality from disparagement? That might reveal something useful. Your reasons for scrapping morality have been said before—there’s inconsistency everywhere; there are 1A problems in other provisions of law. More interesting, and what no one has done: think more about why we have this provision (and why the legislative history doesn’t reveal anything about what it means). Distinguishing disparagement could help. There might not be a clear line—without immoral/scandalous, a lot of cases might go down as disparagement cases (cases involving Christianity). SEX ROD claimed both scandalousness and disparagement.
Smith: sees the blurring too, but thinks disparaging is a subset of scandalousness. Disparaging marks are targeted and there’s actual injury to people. [Here’s where the paper could do some interesting work: why is it that we now see injury to a particularized identity as more injurious than injury to society? Dan Kahan/modes of thinking—cultural perceptions of harm are relevant and change over time. There once was a causal story about how offensive marks and the registration thereof did harm to society, as LaFrance pointed out may still be true for some people.] This provision invites abusive oppositions.
Colman: is lumping all gay men together ok? Opposer can’t speak for the entire group they purport to represent. [though probabalistic harm/far less than majority is usually acceptable in other TM areas, like confusion and secondary meaning] Relic of earlier thread that doesn’t belong in our largely economic system.
Farley: hard to argue it’s a relic when almost every other country has the same system. Other countries say offend morality or the public order.
Hunter: procedurally: why should one offended person be able to stop a registration? If people who aren’t offended had a mechanism to file in support, that might give more information about what percentages of people felt which way. This is consistent w/ other countries’ systems: makes clear that TM is gov’t information policy. Some of the policy is about confusion, but other parts are about other issues. Scandalousness is about avoiding gov’t imprimatur.
What is a theory of scandal? We should understand why defectation and sex of a certain sort is shameful? Lots of sociologists/psychoanalytic theory. If we had a theory of scandal we could figure out which cases were properly decided.
Colman: one of the few instances where IP admits to its political agenda; explore links to other areas where its agenda is less obvious.
Farley: one good empirical question is whether applicants respond to the rejection signal by ending the use of the mark. If so, then the gov’t is having the effect it wants to have (setting aside whether this is a constitutional means).



