What is a “Trademark Use”? Using Other’s Trademarks
What is a “trademark use”? This question comes up in this way: You want to use a trademarked name or brand or logo (not yours). You want to make commentary about the trademark, or simply reference the trademark in some way.
Trademark protections give their owners the right of exclusive use to the trademark, but only when used “as a trademark”. If the use of the mark is for any purpose not a “trademark use”, that use does not fall within the exclusive rights of the trademark owner.
The Good and The Ugly – Trademark Use Examples
Some examples illustrate the point:
1. A magazine story features a photograph of a woman wearing a tee-shirt with picture of a Marvel Comics character. The story is about the woman and her battle with a difficult disease, having nothing to do with the Marvel trademark. The trademark is clearly incidental to the photo and to the story.
2. A cash-for-gold jewelry dealer in Toronto (featured in a New Yorker profile this past week) promotes his business through television commercials featuring the character “Cashman” dressed in a red cape and pair of blue tights and dollar signs on his chest. “Cashman” bursts out of telephone booths to frighten desperate Torontonians into parting with their family heirlooms. The owner of the Superman trademarks felt compelled to ask – nicely at first, not so nicely in the subsequent lawsuit – that “Cashman” stop trading on the Superman goodwill.
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