Commerce Department Releases Useless, Biased Report On Trademark Bullying

from the that's-what-happens-when-you-only-ask-one-side dept

Trademark bullying is a big problem, and it's one that we regularly discuss here on the blog. It involves a trademark holder threatening and/or suing another company claiming infringement, where there's really none. It's quite effective and can have serious chilling effects. After Monster Energy Drink went after Vermonster beer for trademark infringement (yes, a trademark bullying cases that had nothing to do with one of the biggest trademark bullies, Monster Cable), Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy suddenly took an interest in trademark bullies. A report on the issue was requested, and the typically useless Commerce Department took on the task and did a ridiculous job at it. This is a commerce department that seems to think copyright, patent and trademark laws are wonderful and should only be expanded.

You can read the full report (pdf), but you won't get much useful out of it. Eric Goldman's detailed summary of the report's massive failings is much more educational. Basically, much of the "research" for the report came from big trademark holders -- who are often the biggest bullies -- rather than the victims of trademark bullying. So, of course, they said there really wasn't much of a problem at all, and the Commerce Department parroted that position.

The worst part, however, was in the whole discussion on the "duty to police." This is an issue that is regularly raised whenever we talk about trademarks, where people claim that you have to enforce your trademark or you can lose it. As we've explained many times, that's a bastardization of what the law and case law seem to actually say. It's only true that you need to enforce it in situations where there's an actual likelihood of confusion and/or it's being used in direct competition. The tangential or totally unrelated uses don't require you to enforce. Furthermore, there are alternative actions rather than threatening or suing -- such as offering up free or cheap licenses.

Goldman's section about this "duty to police" delves in even further, and basically shows why the Commerce Dept. report is useless:
Second, the report says "a trademark is a property right that an owner has a duty to police." WHOA! Many folks would dispute the characterization of trademarks as "property"; and many folks (including me) insist that the "duty to police" is massively overstated. Later, the report says, "In view of the mark owner’s obligation to police violations, aggressive enforcement of one’s trademark rights does not automatically equate to abuse or bullying." In effect, the report says that it doesn't see any problem at all; but if there is a problem, it's just the natural consequence of that pesky duty to police....oh well, c'est la vie.

Given its apathetic nature, the report doesn't make the logical jump that any intellectually curious person would instantly make: if the "duty to police" might be driving trademark owners to be (over)zealous in their enforcement efforts, maybe we should fix the duty to police. After all, this "duty" isn't in the statute at all; it's barely in the caselaw; and it could be easily remedied with a statutory clarification that might very well be welcomed by both trademark owners and secondary trademark users because it might eliminate ambiguity plaguing both communities. C'mon, guys--that conclusion isn't exactly rocket science.

From my perspective, the "duty to police" is like the proverbial monster under a child's bed. It's not actually there, but boy, it sure seems scary. My academic writing queue is too thick right now to tackle this issue immediately, but I don't recall seeing a good comprehensive academic article grokking the duty to police (if I'm forgetting something, please let me know). That would be an excellent paper topic. I would be happy to work with someone on this project so that we can demonstrate just how massively the "duty to police" is overstated--typically as a business development tool for trademark litigators trying to afford their kids' private school tuition. Naturally, the Department of Commerce report undertook no such research effort into the trademark policing duty itself.
But what do you expect from the Commerce Department? It's really turned into nothing more than an internal lobbying arm for big business, these days. It's too bad the FTC didn't take on this particular task, as it seems like it's really more something they should cover, and at least it's a federal agency that seems to really try to understand the issues, when it comes to intellectual property.
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Filed Under: bullying, commerce department, trademark, trademark bullying


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  • identicon
    Lawrence D'Oliveiro, 4 May 2011 @ 7:19pm

    “Intellectual Property”

    Meaningless term, except as it applies to ideas which are directly at odds with real property.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Jay (profile), 4 May 2011 @ 8:13pm

    Why wouldn't the GAO have a say in something like this?

    Surely, they could help to regulate since it's their job to look into accountability, right?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    VMax, 4 May 2011 @ 8:48pm

    Pick a word

    At this point maybe everyone should be assigned a word when they're born and we all just sue the crap out of anyone who uses it?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Chris in Utah (profile), 4 May 2011 @ 9:16pm

    Eyebrow raised.

    Thank you for some thought on the issue Mike ;). We all have our off moments.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    teka, 4 May 2011 @ 9:41pm

    In a new report, 100% of playground bullies confirmed researcher's hypothesis that they "weren't doin' nuthin" and "he fell down all by himself, honest"

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 4 May 2011 @ 10:18pm

    While I think trademark law can serve a good purpose, perhaps something needs to be done about trademark trolls (those who do nothing with their trademark other than maybe sue others).

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Chargone (profile), 5 May 2011 @ 1:30am

      Re:

      problem is, trademarks are supposed to be a Consumer protection, but are being lumped in with IP.

      seems to me that Trademarks should be one of those things where there's an authority with a list and They come down on people who are violating the trademark, after investigating if such biolation actually exists, after having a report of such. there shouldn't be an adversarial court case involved unless someone is appealing the outcome... or at least, that's what i'd think. of course, you still have regulatory capture issues, but meh *Ishrugs*

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    abc gum, 5 May 2011 @ 4:46am

    "duty to police"

    more like duty to fleece

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 5 May 2011 @ 6:42am

    This isn't a surprise. Our government is so captured that anything else would be absurd.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    dnball (profile), 8 May 2011 @ 12:04pm

    More critique

    Attorney Lara Pearson has critiqued the report as well. See
    http://goo.gl/gc0EN .

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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