Trademark Registration: What is a Trademark? Do I Need to Register a Trademark?


Note: The DearEsq free 'ask a lawyer' site is offered as a free informational service to the public and is not intended as legal advice. Laws vary from state-to-state, and in addition every situation is unique, and relevant facts may not be known. The answer to the question posed below may not apply to in your state or to your situation. For legal advice in your state and your situation you should consult with an attorney in your state who is familiar with the rules and laws in your state.

A trademark is a word, name, phrase or symbol used to identify the source or origin of a good or service provided through commerce. Trademark rights arise through use of the trademark in association with a good or service. For this reason, “naked” assignments of trademarks are not allowed. A valid assignment must assign the goodwill associated with the trademark. As soon as a trademark is used in commerce in association with a good or service, common law rights to the trademark attach. These common law rights can be effective in obtaining an injunction or a judgment against an infringer.

States also provide trademark protection. State laws provide for both registration and enforcement. These state law protections, however, are often not much more valuable than common law rights. Accordingly, most trademark owners opt for either common law or federal law protection.

Federal trademark registration provides several benefits, including treble damages and attorney fees for willful infringement. Federal registration also provides national constructive notice of the owner’s trademark rights. While federal trademark registrations must be renewed every ten years, trademark rights themselves are indefinite, lasting until the mark becomes abandoned, or in rare cases, generic.

The protection afforded a particular trademark depends in large part on how descriptive the mark is of the particular product or service provided in association with the mark. For example, if the product is apples, the mark “APPLE” would be deemed “generic,” the mark “RED” would be deemed “descriptive,” the mark “DEVIL’S FRUIT” would be “suggestive,” the mark “ROYAL” would be “arbitrary,” and the mark “QWIPPLE” would be “fanciful.” These distinctions are important as generic marks are neither protectable nor registerable, while suggestive, arbitrary and fanciful marks are both protectable and registerable.

Descriptive marks fall into two categories-the descriptive and the merely descriptive. Descriptive marks, while often not registerable in and of themselves, may be registerable if the owner can demonstrate that consumers have attached a “secondary meaning” to the mark. Secondary meaning attaches when, in the minds of consumers, the mark is associated more with the particular product than with the word’s ordinary meaning. If a mark is determined to be merely descriptive, however, the mark is not federally registerable. The United States Patent and Trademark Office has determined that in such cases the descriptive nature of the mark is such that no amount of advertising or sales would be sufficient to override the consuming public’s descriptive association with the mark.

Trademarks are not limited to words, but include logos and symbols, and may even include such diverse attributes as color, in the case of pink fiberglass, sound, as is the case with the NBC chimes, or scent, for floral scented yarn. Trademarks typically associated with the Internet include .com domain names (of which over 30,000 are presently pending), animated browser icons, and “e” (for electronic), “i” (for Internet), and “o” (for online) marks, such as E-VIDEO or I-MUSIC. As with any other type of trademark, the types of protection available range from common law protection, which attaches to a protectable mark as soon as it is used in association with a good or service, to state law registration, to federal law registration. While state law protection provides some added benefit over common law registration, it is no substitute for full, federal registration, which provides constructive notice of the trademark rights and the availability of treble damages and attorney fees in the case of willful infringement… [Continued here]