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China's Trademark Applications Exceeds 10m

  The number of applications submitted for trade mark registration reached over 10 million at the end of June 2012, ranking the first in the world, said ChinaDaily.com this week. China, the ‘workshop of the world’, is the choice for many UK companies when it comes to manufacturing goods. It is the world’s top manufacturing country, having taken the crown from the US last year, and now accounts for almost a fifth of global manufacturing output. However, while many UK companies are taking advantage of China’s cost-saving benefits many are unaware that even if they do not wish to sell their goods in China, they should register their trade mark there or risk someone else doing it first. Registering a trade mark in a country outside the EU is a not an overly complex or costly process (for China the majority filed by Trade Mark Direct are from £400 - £800) and once your application has been made it has priority over any subsequent applications, mischievous or otherwise. It currently take...

Campaign Update on KEEP CALM AND CARRY ON

 We would like to give you an update on the  'KEEP CALM AND CARRY ON'   campaign and our actions to cancel the EU trade mark registration for  'KEEP CALM AND CARRY ON'  by a company belonging to Mr Mark Coop. The trade mark registration gives the owner trade mark rights in all EU countries over posters, clothing, household items and other merchandise.  Firstly we are grateful to all those who have supplied evidence to us of  ‘KEEP CALM AND CARRY ON’  products being sold. This will be submitted soon. As expected, Mr Coop’s team has responded to our action to cancel the trade mark but we are pleased to say that there is nothing in his arguments or evidence that we were not anticipating. We have prepared arguments on why in law the registration should not have been accepted.  If anyone has evidence of volume sales, supported by invoices or other paperwork, to high profile high street retailers (e.g. department stores) these would ...

A Trade Mark Can Stop Fakes Ruining Your Business

 Fake goods are nothing new but a trade mark can stop a rogue competitor in their tracks. Professional Golf Europe (PGE), a leading manufacturer of high end Golf equipment with brands such as VEGA and Radius putters, recently took action against a Chinese supplier selling fake versions of PGE's merchandise on Ebay. “Once we alerted eBay to our trade mark they removed the offending items from sale, but without it we wouldn’t have had a leg to stand on,” said Peter Lord, Director of Professional Golf Europe (PGE). PGE’s brands are trade mark protected worldwide, with the help of Trade Mark Direct, ensuring it can stop any infringements quickly.  This includes in the Far East (a fakers’ paradise) where it manufactures. Amazon and eBay honour trade marks but a company must prove they have legal rights of ownership. Check now to see if your business name is available, it only takes a couple of minutes.

Trade Mark Are Ring Fenced for the Olympics

 The Guardian, in a piece headlined 'You can say it's 2012…but unless you're a sponsor don't mention the Olympics', wrote about the extensive constraints on companies when it comes to anything associated with the Olympics.   In 2006 the London Olympic Games and Paralympic Games Act was passed, which, together with the Olympic Symbol (Protection) Act of 1995 provides "a special level of protection to the Games and their sponsors over and above existing copyright or contract law.”  Be warned, “a breach of these acts is a criminal offence". The Guardian noted that “as well as introducing an additional layer of protection around the word "Olympics", the five-rings symbol and the Games' mottoes, the major change of the legislation is to outlaw unauthorised "association". This bars non-sponsors from employing images or wording that might suggest too close a link with the Games. “ This means that all of the following expressions could be c...

Trade Mark Direct in the FT

  Mark Kingsley-Williams, founder and director of Trade Mark Direct, is quoted in this weekend’s   Financial Times (24 – 25 March 2012)   on the issue of branding.  See the excerpt below: “Mark Kingsley-Williams, founder of Trade Mark Direct, an online legal support service, says the classic mistake is to believe that it is enough to register a business name at Companies House or buy the web address. It isn’t. “The growth of the internet has made branding a minefield for many small businesses, Kingsley-Williams adds. “For small and medium-sized businesses in particular, a lot of the business they attract is coming through people searching online, whereas previously that business may have come through Yellow Pages advertising. “As a result, people are resorting to all manner of ways to do down their competitors online. “Whereas before if somebody was operating in a particular line of business in Scotland and using the same name as another business in Penzance, the two...

Press Release: 90% of Companies Trading Online Have No Trade Mark & Are Risking Livelihoods

 In 2012 a shocking number of businesses, around 90% [1]  of SMEs, are putting their livelihoods at risk by trading online without a trade mark, estimates Trade Mark Direct, the UK’s leading trade mark company.  It can cost a company thousands to re-brand.  The cost to Frazer Evett, from Christian Clothing Alliance, who was forced to re-brand his company, as another company already owned the name, was £27,941.  “This included stock we couldn’t sell, employing a designer to re-brand, re-working the website, re-ordering stationery, loss of materials and lost sales while rebranding,” said Frazer Evett.   Only 30,270 [2]  trade marks were registered in 2010 and this is despite over 400,555 new companies being registered [3]  (financial year 2010 – 2011) and as some will be for well-established companies it shows that far less than 1 in 10 new companies are trade marking their business name.     “Trading online without a trade ...

An Apple a Day in Trade Mark Law

  Barely a day goes by without Apple Inc. taking on another business in a corner of the world to protect its brand. This time its focus is directed at New Zealand and a Kiwi entrepreneur, Hayden Crowther, who sells ‘driPhone’ smart phone cases.  Mr Crowther has been selling the driPhones, waterproof and shockproof covers, since May last year and in September 2011 applied to trade mark it.  Having almost reached the final hurdle, Apple at the last minute put in a request to have more time to consider objecting to the trade marking of the driPhone.  "My product is driPhone, not iPhone, and they are ... just trying to scare me," said Mr. Crowther, who is taking legal advice As Apple flexes its muscles and ponders its next move, it’s hard to call the final outcome but as always our advice is to steer clear of brand names that can be associated with existing brands. Think about creating a made-up name, as this is one of the easiest ways to a successful trade mark applicat...

A Prime Time to Register Your Trade Mark

  If you were one of the thousands of parents across Britain who bought a Tranformers Optimus Prime this Christmas you might be interested (or not!) to know that its toy maker, Hasbro, has filed a suit against computer company, Asus, for alleged trademark violation regarding the use of the name ‘Transformer Prime’ for its latest tablet pc. Hasbro could be in for a battle, greater than any featured in the Transformer storylines, as trade mark law is made up of different classes which apply to certain categories of product so two companies can own the same trade mark as long as they are registered in different product categories. Hasbro, however, refutes this and is arguing that the Transformers brand is expanding and they need to protect it through a wider array of goods (hmmm not so good news for our pockets then..).  It is also arguing that Asus is merely leveraging off its brand for its own ends. Big brands, like Hasbro, think nothing of coming after companies they believe a...

Trade Mark Direct Advises Caution on New Domain Name

  Trade Mark Direct (trademarkdirect.co.uk), the leading UK trade mark company, is advising companies not to rush into buying the new .xxx adult entertainment industry domain name, which launched this week, because for many it will be a needless expense.    The new domain name is designed to incorporate heightened security barriers and protect young people from accessing unsuitable material online.  “While it is possible to buy your company’s .xxx domain name for a one-off fee (around $200 to $300) there is probably no need for most companies to consider this,” said Mark Kingsley-Williams, director at Trade Mark Direct.  “We doubt that too many adult sites would want to call themselves www.rotherhamwastedisposal.xxx , although if you do sell soft toys through a site called  www.fluffybunny.co.uk , perhaps you might want to consider claiming the .xxx  domain. “However  Search engines’  filtering mechanisms do mean that the .xxx sites will be c...

The Trade Mark Battle of the Geeks

 It was once an insult used to ridicule computer experts.  Now the term ‘geek’ is a highly-sought after trademark term, which appears to have transcended parody and now denotes knowledge, learning and expertise…..Well, according to US electronics giant, Best Buy, it does.  Best Buy claims to own the word 'geek' and is vigilant in stopping any uses that it feels infringes its ‘Geek Squad’ trade mark.  Best Buy's founder Robert Stephens argues that companies risk losing large disputes if they don't pursue minor cases.   Amusingly, he told the Wall Street Journal recently that he had allowed several school chess clubs to call themselves 'geek squads.' Under trade mark law, you must prove that other uses are likely to cause confusion in the marketplace.  The first stage in any dispute is a ‘Cease and Desist’ order or request to halt an activity (cease) and not to take it up again later (desist); or else face legal action. While it’s important to protect yo...