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Indiana Intellectual Property Blog

~ Trademark and Copyright Law Updates in Indiana

Indiana Intellectual Property Blog

Author Archives: Kenan Farrell

Stories from the Week that Was – 10/23-10/29/11

30 Sunday Oct 2011

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Copyright, Entertainment Law, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Privacy, Social Media, Stories from the Week that Was, Tech Developments

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Stories from the Week that Was – 10/23-10/29/11

How Recruiters Use Social Networks to Screen Candidates

Startup Funding by the Numbers [INFOGRAPHIC]

Piracy and Copyright Challenges in 1841 Mirror Those of Today

The Future Of Music Business Models (And Those Who Are Already There)

Tips for Defending Allegations of Domain Name and Trademark Cybersquatting

Long Island Couple files Trademark Application for Occupy Wall St.

US government requests for Google user data grow 29%

Law School Admissions Officers Are Googling Applicants and Checking Them Out on Facebook

“OH WOW. OH WOW. OH WOW.” – Steve Jobs final words, via A Sister’s Eulogy for Steve Jobs

More questions about LiTEBOX: Trademark Fraud?

28 Friday Oct 2011

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Branding, Indiana, Indianapolis, Intellectual Property, Tech Developments, Trademark

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Greg Ballard, Mitch Daniels

When new companies come to Indianapolis promising tech jobs, particularly as part of a joint announcement with the Governor and Mayor, I like to check our their trademark portfolio and make sure all is in order. Apparently in the excitement of watching Michael Jordan highlights on top of semis or receiving multi-million dollar tax abatements, LiTEBOX has added the federal trademark registration notice, ®, to their Facebook page despite not owning a valid trademark registration. This could cause LiTEBOX trademark problems now (fraud) or later (inability to protect their mark based on this earlier fraud).

“Improper use of the federal registration symbol, ®, that is deliberate and intends to deceive or mislead the public or the USPTO is fraud.” Trademark Manual of Examining Procedure 906.04

In addition, LiTEBOX at some point is going to have to reconcile their use of the trademark with the owners of this trademark application:

Trademark considerations may seem small given all of the other questions that have been raised about LiTEBOX, but let’s hope they find good IP counsel soon to get their trademark situation sorted before it results in a big headache.

To everyone else, this is a good reminder to scan your marketing materials and online platforms for improper use of a trademark notice.

Long Island Couple files Trademark Application for OCCUPY WALL ST.

24 Monday Oct 2011

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Intellectual Property, Trademark

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Occupy Wall Street

It was just a matter of time before capitalism found a way to make profit off the Occupy movement. IP carbetbaggers have now begun moving in to lay claim to their piece of the revolution. A couple in Long Island, New York, has recently filed a trademark application for “OCCUPY WALL ST.” in connection with all sorts of fun retail items ranging from bumper stickers to sport bags to footwear.

A few practical trademark lessons can be learned here. First, register your trademarks or someone else will. If your organization has a trademark if doesn’t want registered by some t-shirt dealer in Long Island, be sure to file your own application first. I’m not sure exactly who would be the appropriate applicant for the OCCUPY WALL ST. trademark but I’m pretty sure it’s not this couple.

That being said, the more important lesson from this story requires me to wish good luck to these trademark applicants who have now taken on the legal obligation to enforce their OCCUPY WALL ST. trademark. If an infringer of a mark is known to the trademark owner (or should have been known through routine diligence) and is allowed to go unchallenged, the trademark owner can lose its trademark. In other words, this couple now has to start enforcing (via Cease & Desist letters, UDRP actions, trademark litigation, etc.) their OCCUPY WALL ST. trademark against the masses in Liberty Plaza and around the world. I’d love to shake hands with the lawyer who takes up that case. The obligation to protect one’s registered trademarks is a simple but valuable lesson that most self-filers don’t ever receive.

Stories from the Week that Was – 10/16-10/22/11

23 Sunday Oct 2011

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Social Media, Stories from the Week that Was, Tech Developments, Trade Secret, Trademark

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Stories from the Week that Was – 10/16-10/22/11

McDonald’s sues China trademark body over logo dispute

Chinese man pleads guilty for U.S. trade secret theft

Obama announces full withdrawal from Iraq

NATO Commander Announces End to Libyan War Over Facebook

How Recruiters Use Social Networks to Screen Candidates

“The idea of copyright did not exist in ancient times, when authors frequently copied other authors at length in works of non-fiction. This practice was useful, and is the only way many authors’ works have survived even in part.” Richard Stallman

Indiana Scientist Pleads Guilty to Stealing Trade Secrets for China

19 Wednesday Oct 2011

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Indiana, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Southern District of Indiana, Trade Secret

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Cargill Inc., Dow Chemical Co., Intellectual Property, Kexue Huang, Misappropriation of Trade Secrets, Southern District of Indiana, U.S. Economic Espionage Act of 1996

Indiana companies can take an extra dose of comfort today knowing the Indiana courts and prosecutors are protecting their valuable intellectual property. A Chinese-born scientist pleaded guilty on Tuesday to stealing valuable trade secrets about pesticides and food products from two major U.S. companies and sending the information to China and Germany.

Kexue Huang, 46, worked at a Dow Chemical Co subsidiary from 2003 to 2008 in Indiana where he led a team of scientists developing organic insecticides and then later for another agribusiness giant, privately held Cargill Inc.

Huang pleaded guilty in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana to one count of stealing trade secrets from Cargill and one count of engaging in economic espionage at Dow, only the eighth case charged involving the U.S. Economic Espionage Act of 1996.

Click here for the full Reuters story or the original indictment over a year ago.

For more information on protecting your valuable trade secrets: Creating a Trade Secret Policy

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