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 Chilling Effects Clearinghouse > Domain Names and Trademarks > Notices > Live Long and Prosper? Not with our name, says Prosper Marketplace Printer-friendly version

Live Long and Prosper? Not with our name, says Prosper Marketplace

December 14, 2007

 

Sender Information:
Prosper Marketplace Inc.
Sent by: [Private]
FELDMAN GALE - INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW
Miami, Florida, 33131-433

Recipient Information:
[Private]
[Private]
NY, 10918, US


Sent via: email
Re: Cybersquatting, Trademark Infringement, and Unfair Competition of PROSPER(r) by Regis

To Whom It May Concern:

This Firm represents Prosper Marketplace, Inc., which is the owner of the trademark registrations:

PROSPER(r) registration no. 3,277,812
PROSPER(r) registration no. 3,253,371
PROSPER(r) registration no. 3,274,817

Copies of the foregoing certificates of registrations from the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) are enclosed. Prosper Marketplace, Inc., is also the owner of the PROSPER trademark application that has been assigned USPTO serial number 78,806,695. Prosper Marketplace, Inc. has expended substantial time, effort, and monies to promote the PROSPER(r) trademarks and its services related thereto.

As a trademark owner, Prosper Marketplace, Inc. has an affirmative legal obligation to protect and enforce its trademarks in order to ensure that customers are not confused as to the source and nature of Prosper Marketplace, Inc.'s goods and services and to protect the value of such important intellectual property. Thus, it is critical that Prosper Marketplace, Inc. ensure that its trademarks are used only in a manner of its choosing, else the value of its trademarks could be diminished.

It has come to our attention that Application Designs has registered the domain name www.prosperreport.com and is improperly using this domain name in violation of Prosper Marketplace, Inc.'s trademark rights. The use of the name www.prosperreport.com is confusingly similar to Prosper Marketplace, Inc.'s PROSPER(r) trademarks. The registration and use of www.prosperreport.com incorporates the PROSPER(r) trademarks and constitutes cybersquatting in violation of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. ? 1125. Moreover, www.prosperreport.com was not created until March 1, 2007, which is after Prosper Marketplace, Inc.'s first use in commerce of the PROSPER(r) trademarks. Likewise, continued use of the www.prosperreport.com is likely to cause confusion among the consuming public, and thus constitutes trademark infringement and unfair competition in violation of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. ?? 1051 et seq., California Business & Profession Code ? 17200 et seq., and common law rights.

As a result, Prosper Marketplace, Inc. has no choice but to require Application Designs to transfer the domain name www.prosperreport.com to Prosper Marketplace, Inc. and to cease and desist from registering or using www.prosperreport.com and any domain name with the term "prosper" or any substantially similar imitation thereof. Substantially similar imitation includes any combination with other words or a change in spelling or words that are identical with, resembles, or are so similar to the term "prosper" that such words are likely to cause confusion, or deceive, or mislead others.

Although Prosper Marketplace, Inc. may be entitled to recover significant remedies, it prefers to resolve this matter in a speedy and amicable manner, and without the need for any litigation. Prosper Marketplace, Inc. does, however, believe it is necessary to caution Application Designs that remedies for cybersquatting and trademark infringement can be quite substantial and include statutory damages, a disgorgement of any profits earned, actual damages incurred, and/or a reasonable royalty, attorney's fees, and costs. In certain instances, the disgorgement of profits, actual damages, and/or reasonable royalty can be multiplied up to a factor of three. Additionally, Prosper Marketplace, Inc. may be entitled to an injunction preventing Application Designs from infringing the PROSPER(r) trademarks and requiring Application Designs to transfer the domain name www.prosperreport.com to Prosper Marketplace, Inc. You should also be aware that all officers, directors, employees and agents who participate in or have the ability to supervise and control the infringing conduct may be found personally liable for the infringement.

Accordingly, in an effort to amicably resolve, this dispute, Prosper Marketplace, Inc. proposes the following:

1) Application Designs shall immediately cease use of the domain name www.prosperreport.com;

2) Application Designs shall immediately take steps to transfer the registration for www.prosperreport.com to Prosper Marketplace, Inc.;

3) Application Designs shall not register or use any other domain name which uses in any way the term "prosper" or any term that is substantially similar to the term "prosper";

4) Application Designs will signify its acceptance of these terms by signing in the space provided at the end of this letter and returning a signed copy of this letter to us.

In exchange for your agreement and compliance with all of the terms and conditions set forth herein, Prosper Marketplace, Inc. will agree to waive any claim for past damages relating to your infringement and will reimburse your for costs associated with the transfer of the domain name www.prosperreport.com to Prosper Marketplace, Inc.

If these terms are not accepted before December 23, 2007, this offer will expire and Prosper Marketplace, Inc. will be placed in a position where it will be required to take more formal action. Prosper Marketplace, Inc. reserves all of its rights and remedies in the event these demands are not met. We sincerely hope this will not be necessary.

We look forward to your cooperation in this matter. If in the interim you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact me.


Very truly yours,

Feldman Gale, P.A.


[private]


Enc.
Cc: Prosper Marketplace, Inc.

I HEREBY AGREE TO AND ACCEPT THE TERMS
AND CONDITIONS DETAILED ABOVE:

By:__________________________
on behalf of Application Designs


Title:_________________________


Print Name:____________________


Date:_________________________

Int. CL: 38
Prior U.S. Cls.: 100, 101, and 104
Reg. No. 3,277,812
United States Patent and Trademark Office Registered Aug. 7, 2007

SERVICE MARK
PRINCIPAL REGISTER

PROSPER

PROSPER MARKETPLACE, INC. (DELAWARE CORPORATION)
111 SUTTER STREET, 22ND FLOOR
SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94104

FOR: TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES, NAMELY ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION OF DATA AND MESSAGES; ONLINE INTERACTIVE BULLETIN BOARD AND CHAT ROOM FOR TRANSMISSION OF MESSAGES AMONG USERS CONCERNING FINANCIAL MATTERS, IN CLASS 38 (U.S. CLS. 100, 101 AND 104).

FIRST USE 2-5-2006; IN COMMERCE 2-5-2006

THE MARK CONSISTS OF STANDARD CHARACTERS WITHOUT CLAIM TO ANY PARTICULAR FONT, STYLE, SIZE, OR COLOR


SN 78-806,701, FILED 2-3-2006


KELLY CHOE, EXAMINING ATTORNEY

Int. CL: 38
Prior U.S. Cls.: 100, 101, and 104
Reg. No. 3,253,371
United States Patent and Trademark Office Registered June 19, 2007

SERVICE MARK
PRINCIPAL REGISTER

[star offset in circle] PROSPER

PROSPER MARKETPLACE, INC. (DELAWARE CORPORATION)
153 KEARNY STREET, MEZZANINE
SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94108

FOR: TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES, NAMELY ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION OF DATA AND MESSAGES; ONLINE INTERACTIVE BULLETIN BOARD AND CHAT ROOM FOR TRANSMISSION OF MESSAGES AMONG USERS CONCERNING FINANCIAL MATTERS, IN CLASS 38 (U.S. CLS. 100, 101 AND 104).

FIRST USE 2-5-2006; IN COMMERCE 2-5-2006.

THE COLOR(S) BLUE, WHITE AND BLACK IS/ARE CLAIMED AS A FEATURE OF THE MARK.

THE COLOR BLACK APPEARS IN THE WORDING, PROSPER, THE COLOR BLUE AND WHITE APPEAR IN THE STAR IN THE CIRCLE DESIGN, AND THE COLOR WHITE APPEARS IN THE BACKGROUND OF THE ENTIRE MARK. THE COLOR WHITE IS NOT PART OF THE BACKGROUND, BUT RATHER INDICATES A TRANSPARENT BACKGROUND.

SER. NO. 78-860,700, FILED 4-13-2006

KELLY CHOE, EXAMINING ATTORNEY

Int. CL: 35
Prior U.S. Cls.: 100, 101, and 102
Reg. No. 3,274,817
United States Patent and Trademark Office Registered Aug. 7, 2007

SERVICE MARK
PRINCIPAL REGISTER

[star offset in circle] PROSPER

PROSPER MARKETPLACE, INC. (DELAWARE CORPORATION)
153 KEARNY STREET, MEZZANINE
SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94108

FOR: ONLINE WEBSITE SERVICES RELATING TO MATCHING BORROWERS WITH POTENTIAL LENDERS IN THE FIELD OF CONSUMER LENDING IN AN AUCTION-TYPE ENVIRONMENT VIA A GLOBAL COMPUTER NETWORK, IN CLASS 35 (U.S. CLS. 100, 101 AND 102).

FIRST USE 2-5-2006; IN COMMERCE 2-5-2006
THE COLOR(S) BLUE, WHITE AND BLACK IS/ARE CLAIMED AS A FEATURE OF THE MARK.

THE COLOR BLACK APPEARS IN THE WORDING, PROSPER, THE COLOR WHITE APPEARS ONLY IN THE STAR DESIGN FEATURED INSIDE THE BLUE CIRCLE DESIGN PORTION OF THE MARK.


SER. NO. 78-860,707, FILED 4-13-2006


KELLY CHOE, EXAMINING ATTORNEY

 
FAQ: Questions and Answers

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Question: I have an unsettling feeling in the pit of my stomach about the tone of the C&D I received. Does the tone of the c & d mean I am going to lose this dispute?

Answer: "Gorilla Chest Thumping" refers to the tone of most C&Ds: it?s nasty. The first thing to do is take a deep breath. The second thing to do is to acknowledge that the tone of the letter is a function of the letter writer?s perception that aggression is the best defense: do not take it personally. The third thing to do is ignore the tone and focus on the facts. You may eventually choose to respond aggressively yourself, but do not do so because your opponent has egged you into a useless game of whose gorilla is bigger. Take a tip from Ani Di Franco: "If you play their game, girl, you?re never gonna win." Face Up and Sing, Out of Range, Righteous Babe Records (1994).


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Question: What is the bare minimum of trademark law that I have to understand to decipher this C&D?

Answer: Your opponent should say that your mark is causing consumer confusion or is likely to cause consumer confusion. Or it should mention it's famousness and complain of dilution or tarnishment. (If the C&D does not say this, then no trademark claim may actually exist, and you can rest assured that your opponent is engaging in scare tactics or has hired a highly incompetent attorney). A mark protects more than identical copying, it extends to anything that is confusingly similar, even if it isn't exactly the same.

Functioning in a quasi-magical talisman-like capacity, trademarks designate the source or quality of goods or services. For this reason, the law protects against confusion in the market place by ensuring that marks on the same or similar products or services are sufficiently different. The law also protects famous marks against dilution of value and tarnishment of the reputation of the goods or services on which it appears or the source of those products, regardless of any confusion.

You can roughly assess the validity of your opponent?s claim of confusion by classifying the marks involved. A trademark can fall into one of 5 categories. It can be: (1) fanciful; (2) arbitrary; (3) suggestive; (4) descriptive; or (5) generic. Not all of these varieties of marks are entitled to the same level, or indeed any level, of trademark protection.

A fanciful mark is a mark someone made up; examples include KODAK or H?AGEN-DAZS. An arbitrary mark is a known term applied to a completely unrelated product or service; for instance, AMAZON.com for an online book-store cum one-stop shopping site or APPLE for computers. Fanciful and arbitrary marks are considered strong marks and garner substantial trademark protection.

A suggestive mark is one that hints at the product, but which requires an act of imagination to make the connection: COPPERTONE for sun tan lotion or PENGUIN for coolers or refrigerators are examples. Suggestive marks are also strong marks and receive protection.

A descriptive mark, predictably, describes the product: HOLIDAY INN describes a vacation hotel and FISH-FRI describes batter for frying fish. Descriptive marks do not receive any trademark protection unless their user has used them in commerce and has built up secondary meaning. "Secondary meaning" occurs when consumers identify the goods or services on which the descriptive term appears with a single source. In other words, if consumers know that HOLIDAY INN hotels are all affiliated with a single source, then the mark has secondary meaning and receives trademark protection.

Finally, generic marks simply designate the variety of goods involved: for example, "cola" used on soft drinks and "perfume" on perfume are both generic terms. Generic marks never receive any trademark protection; they are free for everybody to use. (Keep in mind, though, that "Cola" on a nightclub is arbitrary, and therefore receives protection).

If your opponent is complaining that you have used the word "bakery" for a bake shop or "car" for a car repair shop, then you can safely guess that the c & d is baseless. On the other hand, if your opponent is concerned about the fact that both of you use of the term "Sweet Pickles" on alpaca sweaters, then the c & d may have some merit.

There are a few more wrinkles as well. Some marks are word marks (text only) and others are design marks (images which may or may not include text). Design marks do not provide independent protectin for the text incorporated in the design. So if the mark is only a design mark, it doesn't prevent others from using the text so long as they don't copy the design elements.


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Question: What can be protected as a trademark?

Answer: You can protect

  • names (such as company names, product names)
  • domain names if they label a product or service
  • images
  • symbols
  • logos
  • slogans or phrases
  • colors
  • product design
  • product packaging (known as trade dress)


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Question: What exactly are the rights a trademark owner has?

Answer: In the US, trademark rights come from actual use of the mark to label one's services or products or they come from filing an application with the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) that states an intention to use the mark in future commerce. In most foreign countries, trademarks are valid only upon registration.

There are two trademark rights: the right to use (or authorize use) and the right to register.

The person who establishes priority rights in a mark gains the exclusive right to use it to label or identify their goods or services, and to authorize others to do so. According to the Lanham Act, determining who has priority rights in a mark involves establishing who was the first to use it to identify his/her goods.

The PTO determines who has the right to register the mark. Someone who registers a trademark with the intent to use it gains "constructive use" when he/she begins using it, which entitles him/her to nationwide priority in the mark. However, if two users claim ownership of the same mark (or similar marks) at the same time, and neither has registered it, a court must decide who has the right to the mark. The court can issue an injunction (a ruling that requires other people to stop using the mark) or award damages if people other than the owner use the trademark (infringement).

Trademark owners do not acquire the exclusive ownership of words. They only obtain the right to use the mark in commerce and to prevent competitors in the same line of goods or services from using a confusingly similar mark. The same word can therefore be trademarked by different producers to label different kinds of goods. Examples are Delta Airlines and Delta Faucets.

Owners of famous marks have broader rights to use their marks than do owners of less-well-known marks. They can prevent uses of their marks by others on goods that do not even compete with the famous product.


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Question: What are the limits of trademark rights?

Answer: There are many limits, including:

  • Fair Use
    There are two situations where the doctrine of fair use prevents infringement:
    1. The term is a way to describe another good or service, using its descriptive term and not its secondary meaning. The idea behind this fair use is that a trademark holder does not have the exclusive right to use a word that is merely descriptive, since this decreases the words available to describe. If the term is not used to label any particular goods or services at all, but is perhaps used in a literary fashion as part of a narrative, then this is a non-commercial use even if the narrative is commercially sold.
    2. Nominative fair use
      This is when a potential infringer (or defendant) uses the registered trademark to identify the registrant?s product or service in conjunction with his or her own. To invoke this defense, the defendant must prove the following elements:
      • his/her product or service cannot be readily identified without pointing to the registrant?s mark
      • he/she only uses as much of the mark as is necessary to identify the goods or services
      • he/she does nothing with the mark to suggest that the registrant has given his approval to the defendant
  • Parody Use
    Parodies of trademarked products have traditionally been permitted in print and other media publications. A parody must convey two simultaneous -- and contradictory -- messages: that it is the original, but also that it is not the original and is instead a parody.
  • Non-commercial Use
    If no income is solicited or earned by using someone else's mark, this use is not normally infringement. Trademark rights protect consumers from purchasing inferior goods because of false labeling. If no goods or services are being offered, or the goods would not be confused with those of the mark owner, or if the term is being used in a literary sense, but not to label or otherwise identify the origin of other goods or services, then the term is not being used commercially.
  • Product Comparison and News Reporting
    Even in a commercial use, you can refer to someone else?s goods by their trademarked name when comparing them to other products. News reporting is also exempt.
  • Geographic Limitations
    A trademark is protected only within the geographic area where the mark is used and its reputation is established. For federally registered marks, protection is nationwide. For other marks, geographical use must be considered. For example, if John Doe owns the mark Timothy?s Bakery in Boston, there is not likely to be any infringement if Jane Roe uses Timothy?s Bakery to describe a bakery in Los Angeles. They don't sell to the same customers, so those customers aren't confused.
  • Non-competing or Non-confusing Use
    Trademark rights only protect the particular type of goods and services that the mark owner is selling under the trademark. Some rights to expansion into related product lines have been recognized, but generally, if you are selling goods or services that do not remotely compete with those of the mark owner, this is generally strong evidence that consumers would not be confused and that no infringement exists. This defense may not exist if the mark is a famous one, however. In dilution cases, confusion is not the standard, so use on any type of good or service might cause infringement by dilution of a famous mark.


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Question: What do these registration numbers mean? or Why don?t I have any registration numbers in my C&D?

Answer: Do not be led astray by the registration numbers: trademark rights in the United States arise from use of the mark in commerce, not from registering. However, both state and federal law can provide relief from trademark infringement.

If your opponent has registered its mark on the Patent & Trademark Office?s register, then you know that litigation about the mark could occur in federal court. If your opponent has not included any registration numbers, you still could be sued in federal court, but your opponent might simply be relying on state law (or just trying to scare you). If the C&D does not reveal any registration numbers, you should ask if the marks are registered.

If the opponent has included registration numbers, look them up on the Patent & Trademark Office's Trademark Electronic Search System (TESS). You can check the status of a trademark by entering the registration number into TESS's search engine. If your opponent's trademark is labeled "LIVE," then it is likely to be protected by federal law; if TESS labels the mark "ABANDONED," then you have reason to believe that federal law will not protect it (although even abandoned marks can garner protection in some instances). Pending trademark applications are also marked "LIVE", but they do not get a "Reg. Number" unless/until the registration issues.

A Community Trade Mark (CTM) offers regional trademark protection throughout the European Union. The CTM database of registered marks is OAMI-Online.


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Question: What are the benefits of federal trademark registration?

Answer: Federal registration of a trademark has several advantages including notice to the public of the registrant's claim of ownership of the mark, a legal presumption of ownership nationwide, and the exclusive right to use the mark on or in connection with the goods or services set forth in the registration.

Registration Provides the Following:
1. Constructive notice nationwide of the trademark owner's claim.
2. Evidence of ownership of the trademark.
3. Jurisdiction of federal courts may be invoked.
4. Registration can be used as a basis for obtaining registration in foreign countries.
5. Registration may be filed with U.S. Customs Service to prevent importation of infringing foreign goods.


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Question: What about common words that are used for many purposes?

Answer: Common words and alphabetical letters can be protectable trademarks if they are used in arbitrary or unusual ways. One cannot trademark DIESEL to sell that generic type of fuel, otherwise no other diesel fuel dealer could use the word to identify the product. However, one could trademark DIESEL as a brand of ice cream. The owner of the ice cream mark can't use its rights to prevent fuel dealers from using the word on their station pumps nor can it prevent anyone else from using the word for non-trademark purposes, such as a website listing diesel fuel dealers.

In general, the more a mark describes the good or service that it labels, the less strong the trademark protection it gets and the more freedom others have to use the same word for other purposes.

See also this question on the strength of trademarks.


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Question: Where can I find federal trademark registrations?

Answer: The United States Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO) keeps the US federal registry of trademarks. It has an online search capability, TESS, which contains more than 3 million pending, registered and dead federal trademarks. This database may not be complete. One should check the News page to see how current the information actually is.

Be aware: not all trademarks are contained in the US federal register. There are state trademarks, unregistered (common law marks) and foreign marks as well. A mark does not have to be registered to be valid.


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Question: Isn?t the registration process "first come first served"?

Answer: Yes, as long as you have registered and used the domain name in good faith or have legitimate interests in the domain name. However, you have no right to violate trademark law, or ignore your Registration Agreement, or engage in cybersquatting just because you registered the name first.


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Question: What is Reverse Domain Name Hijacking?

Answer: Trademark owners may not file complaints just to harass domain name holders. Under the Policy, trademark owners who file complaints in bad faith are said to have engaged in "Reverse Domain Name Hijacking." It is considered an abuse of the administrative proceeding and the Panel can enter such a finding in the record to warn others about such a trademark owner.


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Question: What is Reverse Domain Name Hijacking?

Answer: Trademark owners may not file complaints just to harass domain name holders. Under the Policy, trademark owners who file complaints in bad faith are said to have engaged in "Reverse Domain Name Hijacking." It is considered an abuse of the administrative proceeding and the Panel can enter such a finding in the record to warn others about such a trademark owner.


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Question: What is the most common mistake a Respondent makes in answering a Complaint in a UDRP proceeding?

Answer: A naked denial, without providing any facts or evidence to support the denial. For example, "I am not cybersquatting", or "I havenot acted in bad faith."


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Question: What defenses are there to trademark infringement or dilution?

Answer: Defendants in a trademark infringement or dilution claim can assert basically two types of affirmative defense: fair use or parody.

Fair use occurs when a descriptive mark is used in good faith for its primary, rather than secondary (trademark), meaning, and no consumer confusion is likely to result. So, for example, a cereal manufacturer may be able to describe its cereal as consisting of "all bran," without infringing upon Kelloggs' rights in the mark "All Bran." Such a use is purely descriptive, and does not invoke the secondary meaning of the mark. Similarly, in one case, a court held that the defendant's use of "fish fry" to describe a batter coating for fish was fair use and did not infringe upon the plaintiff's mark "Fish-Fri." Zatarain's, Inc. v. Oak Grove Smokehouse, Inc., 698 F.2d 786 (5th Cir. 1983). Such uses are privileged because they use the terms only in their purely descriptive sense.

Some courts have recognized a somewhat different, but closely-related, fair-use defense, called nominative use. Nominative use occurs when use of a term is necessary for purposes of identifying another producer's product, not the user's own product. For example, in a recent case, the newspaper USA Today ran a telephone poll, asking its readers to vote for their favorite member of the music group New Kids on the Block. The New Kids on the Block sued USA Today for trademark infringement. The court held that the use of the trademark "New Kids on the Block" was a privileged nominative use because: (1) the group was not readily identifiable without using the mark; (2) USA Today used only so much of the mark as reasonably necessary to identify it; and (3) there was no suggestion of endorsement or sponsorship by the group. The basic idea is that use of a trademark is sometimes necessary to identify and talk about another party's products and services. When the above conditions are met, such a use will be privileged. New Kids on the Block v. News America Publishing, Inc., 971 F.2d 302 (9th Cir. 1992).

Finally, certain parodies of or using trademarks may be permissible if they are not too directly tied to commercial use. The basic idea here is that artistic and editorial parodies of trademarks serve a valuable critical function, and that this critical function is entitled to some degree of First Amendment protection. The courts have adopted different ways of incorporating such First Amendment interests into the analysis. For example, some courts have applied the general "likelihood of confusion" analysis, using the First Amendment as a factor in the analysis. Other courts have expressly balanced First Amendment considerations against the degree of likely confusion. Still other courts have held that the First Amendment effectively trumps trademark law, under certain circumstances. In general, however, the courts appear to be more sympathetic to the extent that parodies are less commercial, and less sympathetic to the extent that parodies involve commercial use of the mark.

So, for example, a risqu? parody of an L.L. Bean magazine advertisement (L.L. Beam's "Back to School Sex Catalog") was found not to constitute infringement. L.L. Bean, Inc. v. Drake Publishers, Inc., 811 F.2d 26, 28 (1st Cir. 1987). Similarly, the use of a pig-like character named "Spa'am" in a Muppet movie was found not to violate Hormel's rights in the trademark "Spam." Hormel Foods Corp. v. Jim Henson Prods., 73 F.3d 497 (2d Cir. 1996). On the other hand, "Gucchie Goo" diaper bags were found not to be protected under the parody defense, Gucci Shops, Inc. v. R.H. Macy & Co., 446 F. Supp. 838 (S.D.N.Y. 1977). Similarly, posters bearing the logo "Enjoy Cocaine" were found to violate the rights of Coca-Cola in the slogan "Enjoy Coca-Cola", Coca-Cola Co. v. Gemini Rising, Inc., 346 F. Supp. 1183 (E.D.N.Y. 1972). In short -- although the courts recognize a parody defense, the precise contours of that defense are difficult to outline with any precision.


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