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Trademark Office cancels trademarks for NFL's Washington franchise

The Washington Redskins are no more, at least as far as the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office is concerned. In a second decision issued by the Trademark Trial & Appeals Board (TTAB), the Board declared that the trademark registrations for the Redskins franchise should be canceled because all six marks are "disparaging" to Native Americans. This is yet another step in a long legal process. The TTAB's first decision to cancel the registrations was way back in 1999, which is long enough ago (barely) that I studied it in law school. The 1999 decision was overturned on a technicality in the federal court system.  

The decision is important to the NFL and its Washington franchise for several reasons. First, a trademark registration over 5 years old carries certain presumptions, including that it is valid, protectable, and insulated from most legal challenges. A registration punches the trademark owner's ticket into federal court anywhere in the country the owner needs to shut down someone unlawfully using the mark (especially for trademarks on a nationwide product like the NFL). A trademark registration also prevents any other person from getting a confusingly similar trademark at the Trademark Office. And, the trademark owner gets to use the ® symbol on its products.

However, in order to get a trademark registration, the trademark owner must comply with certain legal requirements. For instance, you can't get a trademark on the following things:

  • anything immoral, deceptive, scandalous, disparaging (e.g., swear words, the Redskins name);
  • wrongfully suggests an association with a person, groups, beliefs, or national symbols;
  • contains a flag of the U.S., a state, or a foreign country;
  • wrongfully suggests a geographic association with a product (e.g., Champagne is from France);
  • contains the name, portrait, or signature of a living person or a dead president while his widow is still living;
  • anything descriptive, mis-descriptive, or generic about a product or service; and
  • anything likely to be confused with a previously-registered trademark that is still active.

As you can see, there are many pitfalls for the unwary in applying for trademark registrations.

Now that the Redskins registrations have been canceled, the team can still elect to use the Redskins name, and it will continue to have common law trademark rights to the names. Trademark rights arise out of use, not registration, and simply by using a mark in commerce one acquires common law trademark rights. However, if the team or the NFL wants to enforce the Redskins common law trademarks, it faces additional hurdles in doing so — like proving it owns a valid trademark registration. That won't be terribly difficult for the NFL, but that type of burden is more difficult for a smaller business on a tight budget with a shorter period of use.

Trademarks are your brand, your public identity. Brands need to be well planned and protected. I've been a trademark lawyer for a decade. I've helped scores of clients vet hundreds of potential brand names, and I've obtained many a trademark registration. If you need help protecting your brand, please give me a call.

How long will my patent application take?

A couple of patent law professors run a great patent law blog called Patently-O, and they recently came up with a great chart showing how long it takes to get a patent issued once it's been filed — an average of 34 months. If you're interested in patents, you should check out Patently-O — it's got great commentary on most of the important patent cases from the last several years.

You can also check out the USPTO's Patent Dashboard, which I reported on a couple of years ago here. It has lots of information, updated monthly, on pendency statistics for patent applications. An excerpt appears below:

Chipping away at the monolith

I've been fighting State Farm in a couple of federal court cases in east Arkansas. I had to ask the Court to order State Farm to produce its claim handling materials. These are the documents that show whether you get a fair shake from your insurance company. Usually, even if the documents say what they're supposed to (platitudes, we call them), the insurance company didn't follow the guidelines. The judge agreed with my client, and order State Farm to produce those guidelines. There's a good synopsis at the Property Insurance Coverage blog, so check it out.

Adding a PDF printer for Wine-based Windows application on a Mac (How-to)

My previous post showed you how to install a Windows-based PTX viewer on a Mac. The next project is to install a PDF printer so you can convert .ptx files to PDF and open them natively with the Mac.

We're going to use MacPorts again to install a package called CUPS-PDF. This is very similar to the "Save as PDF" feature already on your Mac. Open up the Terminal application and run this command to install CUPS-PDF:

sudo port install cups-pdf

The output of this command will give you some instructions to run upon initial setup. They are:

ln -s /opt/local/var/spool/cups-pdf/$USER ~/Desktop/cups-pdf
/opt/local/libexec/cups-pdf_links.sh
sudo killall -1 cupsd

The first command creates a link to the output folder on your Desktop. You can move this link into whichever folder you prefer. The second command will require you to be an administrator and type in your password (it uses the sudo command). 

The next thing to do is install the CUPS-PDF printer on your Mac. Go to System Preferences > Printers & Scanners, and click the '+' below the printer list. CUPS-PDF should appear in the 'Default' list. Simply highlight CUPS-PDF, click 'Add', and you should have a CUPS-PDF printer in your printer list. (This will work for printing other things to PDF too — for instance, if you want to change print options but Save to PDF won't let you, the CUPS-PDF printer is a good workaround).

Finally, we need to tell the Wine emulator to reload so it can see the CUPS-PDF printer. The command in Terminal to accomplish this is:

sudo port -n upgrade --force wine-devel

After running this command, you should be able to select CUPS-PDF in the print dialog of the E-Tran viewer. Here's the result:

Happy PTX printing!