Sidebar – Finding the Facts of a Case Via Video – Series – NYTimes.com

US Supreme Court

Sidebar – Finding the Facts of a Case Via Video – Series – NYTimes.com.

The US Supreme Court has accepted a YouTube video as a citation in a case.

This must have been tough for the Nine Wise Ones. They are very accustomed to musty old books filled with the pronouncements of dead judges being cited for them. Now, instead, they had a motion picture available to them, as cited evidence, on their computers  — and this motion picture, cited in Scott v. Harris, is apparently being given credence by all but Justice Stevens.

Seeing the action as it happened has the distinct potential to affect how appellate judges work. Right now, they work based on the record made in the lower courts. However, if they can see for themselves the events as the events transpired — hey, they’re only human; the record may be given less deference than it has been given up til now.

That the High Court has seen fit to accept a YouTube video citation may just spark a new era of how citations can be presented in federal court. Yes, the musty old books filled with the dead judges’ pronouncements will remain, as will BlueBook format (the bane of every 1L student), but we seem to be introducing an interesting new element as we slide into the 21st Century if we’re looking at jurisprudence based on YouTube videos.

I’m not sure what I think of this. If the appellate judges are re-trying the case based on the video, I don’t think much of it. If, though, the video is used to show real-world action only as a factor in determining the appellate outcome, I think it’s terrific.

The Kingdom of Spain Ratifies the Singapore Treaty

Singapore Treaty Ratification by the Kingdom of Spain.

Spain has agreed to join the list of nations that has signed the Singapore Treaty; the treaty will enter into force in Spain on 18 May 2009.

The list of signatories to this important treaty regarding trademarks is below, along with the current status of the treaty in that country.

CONTRACTING PARTY TREATY STATUS ENTRY INTO FORCE DETAILS
Australia Singapore Treaty In Force March 16, 2009 Details
Austria Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Belgium Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Bosnia and Herzegovina Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Bulgaria Singapore Treaty In Force March 16, 2009 Details
Burkina Faso Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Cameroon Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Central African Republic Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
China Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Congo Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Costa Rica Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Croatia Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Czech Republic Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Democratic Republic of the Congo Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Denmark Singapore Treaty In Force March 16, 2009 Details
Dominican Republic Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Estonia Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Finland Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
France Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Ghana Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Guinea Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Haiti Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Hungary Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Iceland Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Italy Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Kenya Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Kyrgyzstan Singapore Treaty In Force March 16, 2009 Details
Latvia Singapore Treaty In Force March 16, 2009 Details
Lebanon Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Lithuania Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Luxembourg Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Madagascar Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Mali Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Mauritania Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Mexico Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
New Zealand Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Papua New Guinea Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Portugal Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Republic of Moldova Singapore Treaty In Force March 16, 2009 Details
Romania Singapore Treaty In Force March 16, 2009 Details
Russian Federation Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Senegal Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Singapore Singapore Treaty In Force March 16, 2009 Details
Spain Singapore Treaty In Force May 18, 2009 Details
Switzerland Singapore Treaty In Force March 16, 2009 Details
Tajikistan Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Togo Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Turkey Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Ukraine Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
United Kingdom Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
United States of America Singapore Treaty In Force March 16, 2009 Details
Uruguay Singapore Treaty Signature   Details
Uzbekistan Singapore Treaty Signature   Details

Jury Maintains Legality of Pay-Per-Click Bids on Trademarks

 

Seal of the US District Court for the Western District of Texas

Huh.

It seems that a jury in the US District Court for the Western District of Texas (“WDTX”) has rejected the argument that pay-per-click (“PPC”) bidding on registered trademarks constitutes trademark infringement.

In The College Network, Inc. v. Moore Educational Publishing, Inc., WDTX Docket No. A-07-Ca-615-LY, the arguments ran like this:

  • College Network, Inc., d/b/a iStudySmart, argued that Moore Educational Publishing, Inc. infringed their registered mark when they placed PPC bids on the words “college” and “network”.
     
  • Moore Educational Publishing, Inc. argued that PPC bids are not “use in commerce,” so no infringement could possibly occur. They also argued that the mark COLLEGE NETWORK was invalid for genericism.

The jury bought the surprising part of Moore’s argument and held that the mark is valid but not infringed since they decided that PPC usage is not “use in commerce.”

It didn’t help College Network that they were using the same PPC strategy against Moore, of course, but still I’m not convinced that the trademark (since it was held to be valid) didn’t get infringed. Frankly, I think this case has been wrongly decided.

Let’s look at this while taking away the interfering medium of the internet. Basically, what seems to have happened here is that one company used the registered trademark of another in a way that gave the company using the mark an advantage in the marketplace to the detriment of the owner of the mark. That sounds an awful lot like “use in commerce” to me, and like the textbook definition of not only trademark infringement but willful trademark infringement.

Now let’s add the internet back in to the equation. Evidently, bidding on a competitor’s registered mark has become common practice in the search-engine marketing industry. (as an aside, that’s a problem right there; it takes control of the registered mark away from the owner of the mark, which means that the owner of the mark can’t possibly police their mark as required). It gives more companies the possibility of front-page listing in search-engine results. However, these front-page listings piggyback on the registered trademarks of others — using the registered mark of another in a way that gives the infringer an advantage in the marketplace to the detriment of the owner of the mark. That still sounds an awful lot like “use in commerce” to me, and like the textbook definition of not only trademark infringement but willful trademark infringement.

I hear a cry of “But everyone is doing it” in this defense. Well, let’s take that to an extreme. It is against federal law to engage in racketeering; if a racketeer were to cry out in federal court that “everyone is doing it,” do you think the racketeer should be able to duck a conviction? No; the federal prosecutor would be all over our racketeer to find out who “everyone” is so she could go after “everyone” for racketeering. But wait: College Network says that this defense might have some merit; let’s not convict the racketeer since “everyone is doing it.” Trademark and racketeering are two different theories that have little to do the one with the other, but, taken to extreme, this is the precedent that this defense’s win sets for us.

It will be interesting to see what happens if this case is appealed. Keep an eye peeled on the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit for further developments.

The Credit Crisis, visually represented

The Crisis of Credit Visualized, Part 1

The Crisis of Credit Visualized, Part 2

These two videos are a good representation/explanation of how we got where we are today. They were posted on YouTube by graphixmdp last week. I post them here because the economy stinks right now and I think it’s important for everyone to understand why. These videos are short, interesting, and they explain why.

Nominees Sought for National Medal of Technology and Innovation (deadline is 29 May 2009)

National Medal of Technology and Innovation

Nomination Guidelines.

According to the USPTO’s website:

“The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is seeking nominations for the nation’s highest honor for technological achievement. The USPTO administers the NMTI program on behalf of the Secretary of Commerce. The deadline for nominations is May 29, 2009.

“The nominations can be made for an individual, a team of up to four individuals, a company or a division of a company. The honorees are chosen for their outstanding contributions to the nation’s economic, environmental and social well-being through the development and commercialization of technological products, processes and concepts; technological innovation; and development of the country’s technological manpower.”

 

Nominate yourself if you want. Or nominate the inventor in the next lab. Or, if she’s an inventor, nominate your next-door neighbor. It’s quite an honor for an inventor to receive this medal. The contribution for which the medal is given DOES need to be something that really helps out in the art in which the invention lies. Examples of prior winners include Steve Jobs; Steve Wozniak; IBM; Industrial Light & Magic; Ralph Baer (the guy who basically invented video gaming); eBay; and others of like contributory scale. The President of the US awards the medal every year.

It's only just begun…

 

money money money money money money money money...

 

Recession Worst in Three Decades – Bloomberg.

 

The Economy. The downturn we’re seeing right now is likely to be only the beginning of what could well be a multi-year depression. People are losing jobs by the millions (time to go into business for themselves?) and the economy as a whole is predicted to shrink by almost 2% this year alone.

The economists are shrieking that is the worst economic downturn that we’ve seen since the mid-1970s, and it may go further and exceed that. Let’s hope we don’t have another Great Depression on our hands.

And it’s not just the USA that’s feeling the pinch. This downturn is global.

The economic stimulus bill has passed (even in the Senate, though by only one vote) and is now in effect, and that may help a little, but I bet it won’t do nearly all of what it’s supposed to do. The lack of jobs pinch the consumers’ wallets and thus the hoped-for spending bump is not likely to happen.

We’ll come through this crisis, but recovery will take time and recovery will be slow and painful. It will be the small businesses that will get us through, though; the day of the corporate behemoth being economic salvation has passed. Small businesses are blossoming as corporate America lays off more and more workers who decide that they’ve had enough of getting laid off and start their own businesses.

A word of caution to you newly laid off entrepreneurs, though: You need good legal and accounting advice. Recognize before you start that your business will start out as a money pit. Your income will vary wildly from month to month. You will struggle and sweat, your books will bleed red ink, and you will wonder why on earth you ever did this to yourself. You may, in fact, go under. Or you may succeed beyond the dreams of avarice.

So here’s to the economic downturn; may it be a well-disguised upturn.

National Inventors Hall of Fame – 2009 Inductees

NATIONAL INVENTORS HALL OF FAME ANNOUNCES 2009 INDUCTEES.

OK, ladies. Take a look at this listing. See if our gender is … um … underrepresented. The one gender-ambiguous name is Jean Hoerni (1924-1997) … and Jean was a he.

I find the lack of women on the 2009 National Inventors Hall of Fame inductees’ list somewhat disturbing; I’m not sure what trend or trends it displays. Should women complain? And, if we should, to whom should we speak? To the judges at the National Inventors’ Hall of Fame? Or to the teachers who traditionally encourage girls to head toward the softer sciences and the humanities while steering boys toward engineering and hard sciences?

In prior years, women have been inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame, but the gender ratio leans heavily toward men in every year.

I find it hard to believe that women don’t change the world as much as men do. A woman invented:

  • the first electronic telephone central office (US Patent No. 3,623,007);
  • wrinkle-free cotton (US Patent No. 3,432,252)
  • adjustable bed lamps (US Patent No. 1,750,993)

Each of these, and many, many other, inventions changed the world in its own art.

I’d like to see one year (or maybe one year per decade) when one of the requirements for induction into the National Inventors’ Hall of Fame is two X chromosomes.

Facebook Repeals Copyright Plan – I4U News UK

Facebook Repeals Copyright Plan – I4U News UK.

The Public Has Spoken.

Facebook put new Terms of Service into effect on its website a couple of weeks ago. Those terms basically said that Facebook has a royalty-free license forevermore to use for any purpose anything that any user posts on the site.

The users roared loudly enough to get the Facebook IP lawyers to listen. They’ve backed down on that one now.

Way to go, Facebook Users!

Apple: iPhone jailbreaking violates our copyright | Apple – CNET News

Apple: iPhone jailbreaking violates our copyright | Apple – CNET News.

Apple may be making a large mistake.

While the debate itself — whether “jailbreaking,” or enabling an iPhone to accept and use non-Apple apps, is copyright infringement — is intellectually interesting, at the end of the day Apple’s insistence that jailbreaking constitutes infringement could land it in deep water in terms of its market share and popularity with the public.

The recent public-relations fiasco that the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) brought down upon itself with its bulk lawsuits against infringing music downloaders is a case in point. Those lawsuits are absolutely supported by the copyright laws; however, the overzealousness with which they were pursued resulted in a steep drop in RIAA’s credibility. I have clients, friends and acquaintances who now pay close attention to music labels and boycott the RIAA because of these lawsuits. RIAA woke up and has stopped the wholesale suing of individuals who download their copyrighted music (they enforce through ISPs now … it’ll be interesting to see if/how that works).

Apple’s refusal to open up its technology so that others can develop and distribute applications has landed it in the Unpopular pile before. It lost the battle for supremacy in the marketplace for its computers through this policy; that’s too bad, too, since Windows is a pale imitation of the Mac interface. I guess Apple didn’t learn its lesson.

The iPhone is a Cool Gadget, but it is not the only Cool Gadget out there; other phones, with similar prices but more permissive licenses, distinctly outrank the iPhone in sales. And that would be because … ? Oh. Right. Users can get software from anywhere for their phones without jailbreaking.

Wake up, Apple, and smell the coffee. Sharing Is Good and Helps Maintain Market Share. I’d hate to see you go under through misguided and overzealous protection of your IP.

And this comes from a copyright lawyer who uses a Mac. But not an iPhone.