Friday, October 25, 2019

"The Original Sin of Trademark Law: Failure to Function" - Northeastern Law School, Nov. 5th

Northeastern Law School and the Boston Intellectual Property Patent Law Society (BPLA) will host a panel/roundtable discussion entitled "The Original Sin of Trademark Law: Failure to Function" on November 5th from 5:00 to 6:30 PM in Dockser Hall at the Law School. Registration (here) is free.


What can we learn from the recent increase in failure-to-function (FTF) refusals at the USPTO? For example, in recent months the TTAB has affirmed refusals to register words (e.g., SCOOP for ice cream), phrases (e.g., QUESTION OF THE DAY for a trivia website) and even a design (graphic tool for use with disk jockey software.) Is the USPTO falling back on a core principle to encompass a variety of vulnerabilities (such as mere descriptiveness, non-use as a mark, unacceptable specimens)? Is there a goal simply to make it more difficult to register dubious marks?  What are the strategic implications for applicants and challengers? This panel will cover a range of views and insights from trademark lawyers, brand owners and academia.

Panelists:
  • John L. Welch, Author, TTABlog and Counsel, Wolf Greenfield & Sacks PC
  • Josh Jarvis, Partner and Co-Chair, Trademark, Copyright & Unfair Competition Practice, Foley Hoag LLP
  • Alexandra Roberts, Associate Professor, University of New Hampshire School of Law
  • Daniel McKinnon, Head of Global Brand Protection and Senior Counsel, New Balance
Moderator:
  • Susan Barbieri Montgomery, Executive Professor of Law and Business, Northeastern University

Read comments and post your comment here.

Text Copyright John L. Welch 2019.

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