Robert Burrell:
use in Commonwealth systems came from strict liability for double identity—once
that was extended to advertising, there are a whole lot of
nonconfusing/beneficial uses of marks in advertising. TM use was brought in as
a safety valve to allow comparative advertising. Since then TM use has
functioned as a safety valve for nominative and descriptive uses in the context
of a regime that is generally strict liability.
What is the US trying to achieve with use given that LOC is
central to your inquiry already? In Commonwealth it mitigates strict liability
w/no confusion requirement.
One potential answer: use as a mark in Commonwealth
countries was never primarily empirical. If Ds seemed good, the court could
find use not as a mark and say that any confusion was from unreasonable
consumers. Functions not merely as a safety valve to allow nonconfusing uses, but
also to allow courts to ignore unreasonable confusion. Why? If you advocate for
use, are you going to get a rule that allows you to ignore certain forms of
irrelevant/unreasonable confusion?
[If your system hates surveys, maybe you don’t need the same
set of rules]
Most tarnishing uses don’t involve TM use (Enjoy Cocaine on
a poster is not about the source of the poster). Once you’ve opened the door to
dilution, use as a mark isn’t a good line; you need something like the EU
multiple TM function idea.
A lot of Australia’s TM problems flow from the problem of divided
use Sheff identifies—the more work you ask “use” to do, the more doctrinal
incoherence will develop, especially when an apex court decides a question
about use and doesn’t understand the full implications. Case about Barefoot
Wines—Gallo didn’t actively exploit its mark in Australia, but a third party
sold Gallo’s Barefoot in Australia. Had Gallo used its mark? The court found
that conscious projection to Australia was not required for use.
What about the defendant who owns a TM in Singapore who
finds its stuff in Australia without consent? That’s use—so the Singaporean
company could be liable for TM infringement in Australia for conduct not under
its control.
Jessica Silbey: cultural analysis of TM use
Early 1900s cases about territoriality and limitations;
Prestonettes & Kellogg, Champion Spark Plug. Midcentury: new statute, when
TMs are still kind of quaint: Lanham Act’s message is that there’s a lot of
common law. Energizes federal judiciary and lawyers, and comes at a time of
postwar industrialization and boom. We get a lot of TM lawsuits from that and
bloat. Not just territories and resellers. We get the modern LOC test.
TM use moved from local naming to more national, even
global, uses both about source ID in traditional way but also the new commercial
culture—mixing of art and advertising, redefinition of art; new idea of what
TMs are for. Warhol’s Brillo boxes etc. P&G, Kraft, Chevron, RCA, GE. In
the background, we still have lots of lower court decisions like Abercrombie,
addressing this expansion in questions about distinctiveness and confusion. But
there are still unclarified assumptions about TM use—still about affixation but
becoming more attenuated.
1988/1995: new matter, including dilution and new statutory
defenses. SCt is a national narrator and tells stories about the nation. Inwood;
Park n’ Fly, SFAA, Two Pesos—more bloat. Qualitex: SCt gets interested in TM
law, which has been evolving in lower courts for decades w/o SCt.
Merchandising: property rights in gross. Heyday of 70s and 80s:
slashing corporate income taxes, perception of huge boom; the Me Generation/Yuppies;
obsession with financial success—Dynasty, Dallas, Wall Street/Gordon Gecko.
That means that TM is property, any use is valuable, and value
belongs to the owner—those ideas were all embraced.
The internet then came in and gave us keywords, rise of
initial interest confusion. More expansive, aesthetic, hybrid digital reality—ACPA.
Congress isn’t inert—DMCA and CTEA. SCt decides Walmart, Traffix, Victoria’s
Secret, and KP Permanent. 13 years later, after a couple of cases like Lexmark,
B&B, and Hana, then in 8 years we get 3 registration cases, JDI. They come
at a time when the 1A is serving corporate and religious interests mostly.
Congress’s ability to act is constrained both doctrinally and politically, and
cultural policy has become deeply regressive. Court: faux textualism/formalism;
major questions doctrine that curtails Congress’s power to create common law
statutes like the Lanham Act; don’t care about difficulties lower courts face
in implementation. JDI is about merchandising which the Court thinks is fine;
Abitron is about insular nationalism and about confining Congress’s powers/ the
only commerce that matter is in the US.
Conclusion: we can’t avoid the culture of propertizing, property
rights, art as advertising; we need to frame within those.
Bill McGeveran: Rogers was great, Rogers is dead, long live
Rogers. Rogers was good for pattern recognition in judges: there was an
understanding that speech interests needed to be protected, and Rogers was
lightweight/didn’t interfere w/core TM. That meant it overlapped w/TM use. Results
since JDI are not good. Lower courts may overrespond to SCt cases in the
beginning. JDI: pattern recognition was in conflict: two visible patterns: “speech”
v. this is a dog toy/real property rights/business interests are at stake. Now
Rogers has been mangled by the suggestion that you can’t screen before the LOC
test in this way. We might need to start from scratch and start from first
principles. Has criticized TM use as a useful tool, but its time has come. What
are the categories of patterns that will lead to pattern recognition as “of
course this is not what TM law is supposed to be for”? NFU; uses housed within communication
that aren’t offerings in marketplace; any confusion about sponsorship would be
mild/outweighed by free expression concerns. We have to think about the “confusion
doesn’t matter” v. “confusion is inherently not happening” models and he reluctantly
endorses the latter. Perfect is the enemy of the good and we still have NFU. If
they say, this is a dog toy, this is not what Rogers is about, they should also
be saying: this is a movie, this is not what TM is about.
Fromer: Business forms affect how we see TM use. Naked
licensing doctrine affects whether businesses try to control references/use by
affiliates. Amazon has also made big changes in how TM works. Do we want that
to become conventional the way merchandising has done? Now that we live on our
phones, limited real estate may improve the case for NFU of logos for actual communication.
[I’m thinking of the finding in the Apple
injunction case that requiring plain text instead of buttons deterred
people from using the “leave Apple” option, and Apple knew it.]
McKenna: recognize that these defense-win cases are littered
with expressions of incredulity about whether there could be confusion—how do
we get court to honor its intuition that confusion is unlikely when the digits
of LOC seem to line up in favor of confusion? Refocusing on specific factors
and theories of confusion. [And reject bad surveys!]
Christine Farley: JDI doesn’t hold that there’s no test
before the test—it holds there’s a test [use] before the test [Rogers] before
the test [LOC]. Would it be better to start from scratch?
How to read JDI? Don’t overread it. Court could be read to
saying that there is a contained space, a heartland, for TM—could also see Tam
and Brunetti that way. But they don’t give us any means for containing TM, only
say there’s a heartland. So: consider Dewberry, the most recent SCt TM case.
Everyone thought that the result would be the result—you can’t disgorge profits
from an unnamed defendant, and the Court didn’t actually say anything else! But
the oral argument (and hints in the decision) suggest that there is trouble on
the ground and we want TM law to work. If Ds are doing infringement schemes
where you can’t figure out where the money is, we want some solution. So we
need to work on the ground to find principles about what’s inherently not confusing—Alito
in JDI oral argument. “In TM law, context is king”—when can we be categorical
v. insist these are deeply factual questions? Maybe in distinguishing b/t the
heartland/bete noir and the periphery?
Grynberg: there are dangers to abandoning “sometimes we don’t
care about confusion”—if this imperial Court is ever convinced to latch onto an
argument, they can make it the law. SCt has never addressed Article III standing
for non-core TM theories. It has never addressed issues in Radiance Foundation v.
NAACP or noncommercial use more broadly; it has never squarely addressed the
LOC test and whether it is consistent w/history and tradition. It’s a separate
question whether they can/should be convinced these are worth doing.
Beebe: add to Silbey the effects of great wealth
concentration, including on famous brands.
Can we tell the story of UK TM law in the same way as Silbey
did? Israeli/Palestinian TM law?
Rogers was too undisciplined b/c any use can be expressive.
RT: No! Rogers was never about “expressive” uses though
courts often misdescribed it that way. It was/is about noncommercial speech.
Lemley: TM moved from sitting outside the 1A b/c TM owners
didn’t sue people for using existing products in movies or video games or using
TM names in books. But a bunch of insane theories of TM law were in fact
brought and sometimes succeeded. Can Rogers be abused? Sure, maybe. We saw some
efforts to use it in challenging circumstances. But the growth of Rogers was
not creep of 1A doctrine reaching out to existing TM doctrines that were
totally settled; it was the opposite—reflected and limited growth of expansive
theories of TM law that were newly articulated. If it is in fact dead, which is
unclear, or wounded, which is, then we need some other doctrine to deal with
these problems.
McKenna: in almost every application of Rogers it was
applied uncontroversially: movies, TV shows, artworks. No reason to throw out a
doctrine appropriate in 95% of its applications. Hard cases shouldn’t lead us
to junk the whole thing. The problem was the formulation “expressive work”
which is incoherent. The question should always have been are you selling the
speech v. are you using the speech to sell something else? That could have made
JDI a hard boundary case but that wouldn’t undermine the existence of the rule.
INTA suggested: keep Rogers but don’t apply it to “ordinary commercial
products.” But that doesn’t work. Isn’t a video game an ordinary commercial
product? But the Court could have said that the Q was whether what you were selling
was speech. That could have solved JDI or it could have been a hard question,
but the fact that every legal rule creates edge cases doesn’t mean that the
rule is bad.
Farley: Silbey’s account reminded her of Schechter’s theory
that societal change was what justified dilution.
Robert Burrell: pragmatically, we end up w/ a less dreadful
TM system with doctrines that provide a safety valve but also don’t have too
many false negatives (as the court sees it).
Heymann: Add in Citizens United to this account. It’s not
just what it says but the folklore around it—corporations are people (true for
a long time); corporations get to be super-people. Consumer drops out of TM
fights as corporate-v-corporate.