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Initial Impressions: Trademark Protection For Abbreviations Of Generic Or Descriptive Terms, Mary Lafrance
Initial Impressions: Trademark Protection For Abbreviations Of Generic Or Descriptive Terms, Mary Lafrance
Scholarly Works
No abstract provided.
Fear And Loathing In Trademark Enforcement, Jeremy N. Sheff
Fear And Loathing In Trademark Enforcement, Jeremy N. Sheff
Faculty Publications
Much academic commentary these days concludes that trademark enforcement has become overly aggressive. Commentators argue that the increasingly expansive claims of rights by well-funded trademark owners are unreasonable, and thus that lawsuits asserting those rights amount to trademark bullying. But I think many, if not most, trademark practitioners would take the contrary view that enforcement can only barely keep up with the constantly evolving and worsening threats to their clients' brands, particularly internationally and online. The purpose of this Essay is to try and bridge these two positions by critiquing each one from the perspective of the other. The first …
Veblen Brands, Jeremy N. Sheff
Veblen Brands, Jeremy N. Sheff
Faculty Publications
The subject of this Article is the legal regime that regulates the struggle for control of a luxury brand across various cross-cutting cleavages in American society—global competition over wealth and status. Rights under federal trademark law, whether asserted under statutory provisions relating to simple trademark infringement or the more specialized provisions relating to trademark counterfeiting, are grounded in the doctrine of post-sale confusion.
Post-sale confusion as a doctrine unto itself has received surprisingly little critical attention. What literature does exist either characterizes post-sale confusion as merely one example of broader trends in intellectual property, or else discusses the economic or …
Accentuate The Normative: A Response To Professor Mckenna, Jeremy N. Sheff
Accentuate The Normative: A Response To Professor Mckenna, Jeremy N. Sheff
Faculty Publications
In his article, “A Consumer Decision-Making Theory of Trade-mark Law,” 98 Va. L. Rev. 67 (2012), Professor Mark McKenna makes two significant claims. The first is that the dominant Law and Economics theory of trademark law—the search-costs theory of the Chicago School—is in some way connected to recent undesirable expansions of trademark rights. The second is that a preferable theory of trademark law—one that would result in more tightly circumscribed and socially beneficial notions of trademark rights—would take consumer decision making, rather than search costs, as its guiding principle. I find myself sympathetic to these arguments, and yet I believe …