Rachael Dickson, Administrative Discrimination? At the Trademark Office
[I feel like there’s
a Panic! At the Disco joke to be made here.]
ID manual: a
searchable database of acceptable IDs of goods/services, regularly updated and
changed to adapt; you can make suggestions to add easily, and new IDs are added
regularly. Benefits: lower application filing fees: $350/class goes to $250
class; clarity and examples as to what IDs are acceptable. Potentially less
back & forth communication w/ PTO=cheaper prosecution, quicker access. “Accidental”
addition of medical marijuana IDs in 2010 led to rise in applications;
withdrawn.
Some options are broad:
medical services. Others highly specific: writing pens that may also be used to
perform pen spinning tricks, arranging beauty contests for animals, financial
evaluation of alpaca fiber. Dickson’s suggestions for “medical services in the
nature of providing abortions,” “consultation services in the field of sexual
health and wellness,” and “providing health information related to
contraception” were all refused as already covered by broader categories. But: Pedodontists,
nevus removal, psychological services for infants, medical clowning are all in there.
No class 44 IDs
contain contraceptive, birth control, condoms; sex or sexual only shows up in
class 44 in the manual for addiction treatment services. Class 44 IDs don’t
contain gay, lesbian, transgender, but prostitution services in the state of
Nevada are in there. Also no reference to cannabis, THC, or CBD. They instead
want a very complicated specification that ought to be in the manual.
Porn/adult film, sex therapy, and nudist resorts also missing. Sex toys don’t
seem to have been added until 2015.
Search codes for
images are very useful; many poop marks are applied for, but there is no poop
codes; since there’s no search code, you will have higher prosecution and
maintenance costs. No results for nudity, genitalia, or penis. They do have
nude. A lot are filed under other parts of body: genitalia are treated as
random other parts.
Applications
w/controversial content may get an “unofficial suspension”—application to
register swastika filed shortly after Tam, and wasn’t examined for over 2 years
and 2 months; 8 times longer than the average 2.7 months first action pendency
in 2017. Why was the obvious failure to function refusal delayed so long?
Applications for goods with uncertain legality also create TM problems—waits over
2 years w/o examination for goods containing delta-8 THC, whose federal
legality is questioned.
Applicants are
essentially left in limbo; they don’t really have any recourse (maybe a writ of
mandamus, but not clear it would work b/c there is no timeline except under the
Madrid Protocol).
Gilden: the patent
side has categories for, e.g., devices for genital massage. Why the difference
between patent & TM sides?
A: much easier to
get a more controversial good registered than a controversial service. TM
office may get in the news more; articles about “how dare they grant a patent
to this thing” don’t seem to appear.
Fromer: Wrote about
inconsistent application of immoral/scandalous applications—is this legacy from
having to police this, making them feel like they could be arbiters of prudery?
A: definitely could
be a factor.
Jordana Goodman: how
do they decide they need a new category? PTO did a lot of work on the patent
side. Is this just in the US and do they talk to other countries?
A: classes are set
internationally, but IDs can vary a lot b/t offices and US has stricter ID
requirements than others; WIPO database is missing a lot of these IDs. The ID
division can be very insular. Question is whether there is demand.
Calboli: every other
country still has the morality rules, so they won’t have these except within
the classes.
Christine Haight
Farley: connecting to Katyal’s paper: “Indian man” design code. That’s highly
offensive [A: but still in there!] but helpful to research. Why the whole pattern?
A: will be talking
to PTO historian; they ended up offering to refund fees to 2010 applicants if
they’d abandon them, so may never find out what happened there.
Rosenblatt: are
there things that are fine? You say discrimination—discrimination against
controversy might be different than other kinds.
A: they’re cowards—avoiding
controversy is the goal. There is a design code for marijuana leaves; you just
can’t get a cannabis ID.
Laura Heymann: There
expressive consequences and functional consequences here. What’s the meaning
and what effects does it have on competitors? Are they having trouble clearing
marks?
Christine Haight Farley,
Design Authenticity
Book project, still
shaping up. Case study of George Nelson’s bubble lamp (mid-century modern
design), how TM law creates new design rights. Nelson was second design
director of Herman Miller Co. Contested origin stories: lack of clarity about
who’s the designer; George Nelson had his own design firm while working as
design director. Lots of stories of derivative iterations of designs where
people were working together. Mazer v. Stein: a sculptural base can be © but
not a midcentury modern lamp; Sears v. Stiffel: invalidated patent on another midcentury
modern lamp. Attributed to Jens Risom, 1950s: a daybed can’t get a design
patent, would need to flip up and fry an egg. Even without IP protection, they
promote authenticity. Herman Miller makes catalogs like coffee-table books,
pushing the idea of the celebrity designer (even though they weren’t exclusive
to Herman Miller). Midcentury modern revives in the 1990s, so there are
reproductions (since there aren’t enough old pieces around). Modernica buys the
original molds etc. and starts selling them. Design w/in Reach had some “authorized”
works but also was making their own versions of furniture. Herman Miller starts
to fight back, saying that’s all fake. Certificate of authenticity; they mark
the hell out of chairs w/designer names, signatures. “You can copy a Rembrandt
and do a beautiful job but it’s not a Rembrandt.”
But this is smoke
and mirrors: they claim rights b/c it’s authentic and it’s authentic b/c they
claim rights. They’ve changed the design, but still claim authenticity: the
authenticity is the brand. Herman Miller brings claims of unfair competition,
false association, false advertising, right of publicity, TM rights including
dilution, claiming designer’s name, model names, and shape of the design. Claim
to have been authorized by designers and heirs—claiming to own history of
design, contra Dastar’s point about not searching for the source of the Nile
and all its tributaries. “Original reproductions” is the concept. They’re
machine-made goods.
Eric Johnson: have
they been successful in pushing others out of the market?
A: not always—Eames
sought utility patents for some designs, so the PTO then didn’t allow
registering the shape. Herman Miller was unsuccessful in one case but learned
from that. Suing all the time, more successfully. When they’re all
knockoffs, it’s a race to the bottom. Design w/in Reach was selling its copies
as “museum quality reproductions.” It’s now hard to sort through the market to
get a good one.
Lemley: larger problem of TM capturing the concept of
authenticity; separated from traditional goal of branding. Should separate the
law from the marketing.
A: most of these other designs went out of production;
Herman Miller never produced some of them. They don’t have good arguments for
being “authentic” except by claiming rights from the designer—lineage. They say
it’s authentic b/c we are authorized by designer/heirs. Authorized how? For what?
As if there were rights to pass to them. Their authenticity leans on rights—mutually
constitutive. Authenticity then has a different meaning than it did in 1950.
Rosenblatt: yes, this is a story about de-tethering of authenticity from
anything else. No ©, no TM—just a case study in a free-floating signifier. Also
true of the “Conan Doyle Estate Ltd.” A collection of distant relatives who
purchased some © from the trust to which they were willed. They have a claim to
authenticity in name and backtracking, but no authenticity. Authenticity seems
to matter to people even when there’s nothing tangible, like NFTs.
Q: are there patterns in authenticity judgments that differ across,
e.g., clothing and furniture?
Jeanne Fromer, An
Integrative Theory of Design & Utility Patents (with Chris Sprigman)
Many technologies
are design-sensitive: computers, shoes, cars, phones, game systems. Design
patent protection: the justification is a puzzle. Maybe historically it made
sense but doesn’t match up to what’s going on now. Share commonalities w/other
IP: encouraging people to create (design). Do we need that incentive? Many
other IP rights protect design—©, TM. Moral considerations? TM-type concern for
signifying source/distinctiveness? Beebe’s critique of sumptuary codes seems
relevant to that. Thinking about what design patent is or could be doing now.
Patent has two
buckets: utility for useful inventions, design for ornamental designs. The
oddness is that when we look at innovating design-sensitive technologies, we
see extensive, iterative interaction b/t industrial designers working with
mechanical and electrical engineers. Microsoft Surface designer: design is
king; industrial design defines the experience, and the form will follow the
experience. Defining experience gives constraints to the engineering team, so
the engineers have to find functional solutions. Similar for Xbox, but in
reverse: function is king, and designers have to come in and fit the best
design for the function provided. Ultimate goal is coherence. Surface is
subject to utility and design patents for the hinge on the back. Overlap in
inventors listed. Apple does the same thing—utility and design patents
overlapping w/same inventors listed. They understand what they’re doing as
highly integrated.
Design patents +
utility patents = optimal protection for fusion of design and function, obverse
to the conceptual framework that pervades the dichotomy of design and function
in patent law. By separating them out legally, you end up protecting the merger
of form and function. If you get both, you control the merger—they’re optimal
together. Still, design patent lawyers are often thinking in very TM-like
terms.
Implications: partial
claiming and fragmented designs might be a really bad thing if we care about
the fusion of form and function. We need better understandings of ornamentality/functionality.
Maybe we shouldn’t be so troubled by seeing both design and utility patents for
the same thing, but we do have to worry about two bites at the apple/staggered
bites at the apple. Might provide a justification for design patent if we get
it right.
If so we might
wonder about the role of design patents for things that aren’t for merging form
and function [designs on, not designs of?]
Q: subsequent
effects on claiming TM protection (using design patent to get secondary
meaning).
A: totally! We spend
so much time in legal doctrine trying to separate form and function and designers
spend so much time uniting them. Many of us are drawn to election doctrines to
avoid bootstrapping one protection to another.
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