Protecting Mobile Apps: Trademarks and Other Legal Considerations Understanding What Can Be Trademarked, Using the Mark, Minimizing Infringement Risks Today’s faculty features: 1pm Eastern | 12pm Central | 11am Mountain | 10am Pacific The audio portion of the conference may be accessed via the telephone or by using your computer's speakers. Please refer to the instructions emailed to registrants for additional information. If you have any questions, please contact Customer Service at 1-800-926-7926 ext. 10. MONDAY, APRIL 27, 2015 Presenting a live 90-minute webinar with interactive Q&A Matthew D. Asbell, Partner, Ladas & Parry, New York Alan S. Wernick, Partner, FisherBroyles, Chicago
40
Embed
Protecting Mobile Apps: Trademarks and Other Legal ...media.straffordpub.com/products/protecting-mobile-apps-trademarks-and... · Protecting Mobile Apps: Trademarks and Other Legal
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Protecting Mobile Apps:
Trademarks and Other Legal Considerations Understanding What Can Be Trademarked, Using the Mark, Minimizing Infringement Risks
If you dialed in and have any difficulties during the call, press *0 for assistance.
Viewing Quality
To maximize your screen, press the F11 key on your keyboard. To exit full screen,
press the F11 key again.
FOR LIVE EVENT ONLY
Continuing Education Credits
For CLE purposes, please let us know how many people are listening at your
location by completing each of the following steps:
• In the chat box, type (1) your company name and (2) the number of
attendees at your location
• Click the SEND button beside the box
In order for us to process your CLE, you must confirm your participation by
completing and submitting an Official Record of Attendance (CLE Form) to
Strafford within 10 days following the program.
The CLE form is included in your dial in instructions email and in a thank you
email that you will receive at the end of this program.
Strafford will send your CLE credit confirmation within approximately 30 days of
receiving the completed CLE form.
For additional information about CLE credit processing call us at 1-800-926-7926
ext. 35.
FOR LIVE EVENT ONLY
Program Materials
If you have not printed the conference materials for this program, please
complete the following steps:
• Click on the ^ symbol next to “Conference Materials” in the middle of the left-
hand column on your screen.
• Click on the tab labeled “Handouts” that appears, and there you will see a
PDF of the slides for today's program.
• Double click on the PDF and a separate page will open.
• Print the slides by clicking on the printer icon.
FOR LIVE EVENT ONLY
PROTECTING TRADEMARK FOR MOBILE APPS
Understanding What Can Be Trademarked, Using the Mark, Minimizing Infringement Risks, And Other Considerations for Mobile Apps.
Matthew D. Asbell
5 The examples shown are copyrights and trademarks of their respective owners, and are used for educational purposes only.
MOBILE APPS – FROM IDEA TO EXECUTION TO EXPLOSION
Mobile apps provide a great new platform for innovators.
It takes careful planning from idea to execution to make your app explode into the market.
Important steps:
Selection
Clearance
Registration
Use
6
ASPECTS OF MOBILE APPS THAT CAN BE TRADEMARKS
A trademark is a source identifier that helps consumers distinguish one’s product or service from similar products and services in the marketplace.
Multiple elements of an app may serve as trademark:
App Name, Word or Phrase
App Logo/Icon(s)/Graphic(s) (still or animated)
App Slogan or Tagline
App Color(s)
App Trade Dress
App Sound(s) Apple Samsung
Instagram Icons
7
WHY NAMING YOUR APP IS SO IMPORTANT?
Recognition: consumers prefer shorter names that identify the nature or function of the product
Distinctive vs. descriptive
Rules of the marketplace
8
BRAND IDENTITY AND APP TRADEMARKS
Trademarks lie at the core of brand identity, in that they define elements that
give identity to the products of a particular company. Brand identity functions for app creators on at least two levels:
The identity associated with the product and
The brand associated with the company that makes the product.
This identity can become a powerful part of what drives sales; highly successful brands like Apple or Google come to stand not only for a stable of products, but for a lifestyle and a set of beliefs.
While a company might not be yet a household name, building a strong brand, bolstered by well-deployed trademarks, might be the first step to getting it there.
9
BRAND IDENTITY AND APP TRADEMARKS
10
MOBILE APPS TRADEMARK
“Angry Birds, the computer game of
choice of the UK prime minister, is the
most downloaded game of all time, says
its creator, Finland's Rovio.”
11
SELECTING TRADEMARK NAME FOR MOBILE APPS
Make sure the trademark is easy to read, write, spell and remember and is suitable to all types of advertising media.
It is short and is thus easy to type into a phone
It is easy to say
It is catchy and memorable
Check that your mark of choice meets all the legal requirements for registration and does not violate the rules of the marketplace
Conduct a clearance search to make sure that it is not confusingly similar to existing trademarks
Check the iTunes and Android Stores too
Check that the corresponding domain name and social media usernames/pages are available for registration
Make sure the mark does not have any undesired connotations in other languages if it will be available in markets where those languages are spoken
12
SPECTRUM OF DISTINCTIVENESS
Less distinctive More distinctive
Distinctiveness in the U.S. ≠ Distinctiveness in other jurisdictions 13
EXAMPLES
Less distinctive More distinctive
Serial No. 85746575 (October 16, 2014)
Mere descriptiveness refusal of THE BEST APP TO DATE for
"Downloadable software applications for mobile
telecommunications devices and handheld computing devices
for organizing personal relationships and dating, for providing
coupons, rebates, discounts, vouchers or special offerings on
goods and services from participating merchants and for
receiving information on events, activities and attractions"
Examples for App names for TIP CALCULATOR:
14
CLEARANCE OF MOBILE APP TRADEMARK
What is the purpose and/or industry in which the app will be used?
15
CLEARANCE OF MOBILE APP TRADEMARK
For proper trademark protection it actually does make a difference whether or not content is downloaded to the end-user or is only accessed in the cloud.
Some Apps work by downloading software to your mobile device and do not require internet access to function.
Other Apps are more of a gateway or service allowing you to access content via the App on the Internet
Often, an App does both.
Offline Apps Online Apps
Both
16
GOODS AND SERVICES RELATED TO MOBILE APPS IC 009 - Downloadable software in the nature of a mobile application for {specify the function of the
programs, e.g., for use in database management, for use as a spreadsheet, for word processing, etc. and, if software is content- or field-specific, the content or field of use}
IC 042 - Providing temporary use of on-line non-downloadable cloud computing software for {specify the
function of the programs, e.g., use in database management, use in electronic storage of data, etc. and, if software is content- or field-specific, the field of use} [this does not include providing on-line computer games that are played on-line]
IC 042 – Computer software design and development
IC 041 – non-downloadable publications and game software
IC 038 - Transmission of sound, video and information from web cams, video cameras or mobile phones,
Due diligence before investing a lot of time and money in launching a new app
Lack of knowledge is normally not a defense to trademark infringement
Having knowledge may increase punishment of trademark infringement
Facebook
Global social networking
service (SNS) giant
Flybook
Korean startup company offering
SNS-based book information-
sharing service
Tinder
Dating app
WildFireWeb -Tinder Web design company that provides website design,
hosting, programming
and others web services to small- and medium-sized
companies, nonprofit groups and school districts.
Registered "Tinder" mark in connection with its
content management services since 2011.
18
GLOBAL REACH OF DIGITAL GOODS/SERVICES
App may be available in certain countries and later expand, or App may be
instantly available globally
Global trademark registration is costly relative to the income generated from most Apps
Rights arising from first to register vs. use
Proactively registering marks in the relevant countries helps to ensure that the marks can be used and to get a head start in keeping others from free-riding on the success of the app
Not seeking registration creates a risk the mark will be hijacked
Monitoring and enforcement
19
CASE STUDIES
Spotimote Develop by Nodria.
“Turn your device into a
remote for Spotify”. 20
REGISTRATION
Trademark rights are typically established either through use or registration
Most countries do not require a mark to be used before it is registered
The protection offered by many trademark registrations is limited to the country in which they are obtained
How are trademarks protected internationally? Madrid System
There are initiatives that enable trademark owners to cover multiple countries with a single trademark application (E.g. Community Trade Mark or CTM (EU))
Usually, an application to register a trademark is made to the national trademark office in the country or region where the applicant wishes to protect the mark
After a trademark application is filed, an examiner in the trademark office examines the application and may raise questions about it
21
USE REQUIREMENTS
Use as a prerequisite to U.S. registration
Goods (Classes 1-34)
On product or packaging, labels, tags
A screenshot of the splash screen or interface showing the mark
On point-of-sale display associated with goods
Screenshot of page where app can be downloaded
Services (Classes 35-45)
On advertising or marketing materials
In course of providing the services
Use after registration Maintenance and renewal
Non-use cancellation
Non-Trademark Use
22
ONLINE DISPLAY ASSOCIATED WITH GOODS
TMEP 904.03(i)(B): Show the Mark in Association with the Goods
Show the mark prominently
In close proximity to a picture or description of the goods
Provide a means of immediate purchase/download
Other relevant factors in evaluating specimen
Content and layout of the web page
Presence of other marks
Intervening text and unrelated material
Overall impression the web page creates
23
USE AS A TRADEMARK
24
USE AS A TRADEMARK
25
PUBLIC NOTICE: MARKING & ATTRIBUTION
Notice advising the public, consumers and competitors, of the status and ownership of the mark
®, Reg., TM and SM
® and Reg. indicate that the mark is registered in one or
more countries
TM and SM usage reflects the owner’s intent to claim trademark rights in the mark
Trademark attribution statements
26
PROTECTING TRADEMARK FOR MOBILE APPS
Understanding What Can Be Trademarked, Using the Mark, Minimizing Infringement Risks, And Other Considerations for Mobile Apps.
Trade Names, Top Level Domains (“TLDs”), & other names.
Licensing.
Infringement.
Other IP Rights.
28
TRADE NAMES, TOP LEVEL DOMAINS (“TLDS”), & OTHER NAMES
Not every use of a word is a trademark.
Trade names – identifies business entities in the marketplace.
Corporate name.
Assumed name.
Fictitious name.
Trade names and trademarks are not the same in the eyes of the law. It depends on the use and the applicable law.
Examples:
Xerox Corporation – a trade name.
Xerox® – a trademark when Xerox® is applied as a label on a copier sold by Xerox Corporation.
Xerox® – a service mark when Xerox® is applied to the Xerox Corporation maintenance services for your Xerox® copier.
29
TRADE NAMES, TOP LEVEL DOMAINS (“TLDS”), & OTHER NAMES
According to ICANN, there are currently some 905 TLDs (as of April 19, 2015).
In addition to the initial TLDs (e.g., .COM, .NET, .EDU, .GOV, etc.) there is a growing number of generic TLDs (e.g., ACCOUNTANT, ACCOUNTANTS, ATTORNEY, BUSINESS, LAWYER, etc.)
Cybersquatting and infringement concerns plus the growing number of TLDs make for an interesting risk algorithm for trademark owners.
Ignoring infringers may result in dilution or devaluation of the brand (or loss of legal rights to the trademark).
What are the impacts of this license on current or future licenses?
How does this particular license fit into the business’s overall licensing strategy?
31
LICENSING
Consider some alternatives to a license agreement including:
A coexistence agreement (e.g., where two parties agree to certain terms and conditions for coexistence of their respective marks in a certain defined marketplace).
A permission letter (e.g., where the requested use is of a very specific, limited use of the subject mark). Depending on the facts, this may be a quicker, less expensive, alternative to a fully negotiated trademark license.
32
LICENSING
Due diligence regarding the licensee.
Licensee’s financial status.
Licensee’s reputation in the licensed geographic territory and on the Internet?
Licensee’s internal operations. Do they have the management leadership and staff to effectively implement and manage the requirements of the trademark license?
What is the licensee’s track record?
Have they licensed trademarks from others and, if so, how did that work out for the licensor and the licensee?
Have they had any disputes with other trademark licensors (e.g., infringement or registration problems with other licensors)?
33
LICENSING
Trademark License: Checklist of terms and conditions.
Identify the marks (e.g., are they registered marks and, if so, where? Are they common law unregistered marks?).
License grant.
Specifications on how the marks appear in use (e.g., any trademark notices, specified formats, use with other marks).
Licensed territory (e.g., can the licensee use the mark worldwide or only in specific, defined territories based on IP address or other territorial criteria?).
Ownership of the marks by licensor – Is the license agreement language clear about licensor’s ownership rights in the marks?
Quality control.
Licensee required to submit materials to licensor showing all uses of the marks.
Licensee requirements regarding all uses of the mark (e.g., conformance to licensor specified criteria).
Licensor audit rights to inspect licensee concerning uses of the marks (e.g., right to examine source code).
34
LICENSING
Trademark License: Checklist of terms and conditions.
Licensee advertising and promotional commitments.
Minimum dollars committed by licensee to advertising and promotion of the marks.
Clearly specify who is liable for advertising and promotional expenses (e.g., licensee or licensor).