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Last year Barack Obama’s
campaign
tried and failed to
take over
a MySpace page created by a
once ardent supporter. In this article Stephanie Paul
explains how celebrities and ordinary people can easily
and legally protect your name from "cyber squatters".
Should You Trademark Your Name?
by Stephanie Paul
Recently, actor Morgan Freeman won the rights to use
the domain name www.morganfreeman.com, which was being
illegally used by the company Mighty LLC. Freeman had
applied last year to the US Patent and Trademark
Office to trademark his name, when he found out that
Mighty LLC was using his domain name "in bad faith to
divert Internet traffic to a commercial search
engine." Ultimately, the arbitrators for the World
Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), the
intellectual property arm of the United Nations,
agreed with Freeman and determined that Freeman's
illustrious career made his name sufficiently
recognizable in the entertainment and movie spheres.
In the always evolving electronic age, many famous
personalities are using trademark law to protect the
use of their name over the Internet. Trademark law,
which prevents confusion between certain goods or
services by indicating the source of the trademark,
also allows someone to recover a domain name
containing their trademark.
A trademarkis a word, phrase, symbol or design, or
a combination of them, that identifies and
distinguishes the source of a trademark. Names of
people and companies, business logos and symbols, and
particular sounds can all be trademarked. Everything
from Julia Roberts' name, the Nike "swoosh," and the
NBC chimes are registered with the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office. Trademarks identify a product,
service, person or thing from others in the same
field, and trademark infringement has, and always will
be, a serious offense.
What's in a Name
Anyone can register a domain name for a few
dollars, which has led to the abundance of
"cybersquatters." Cybersquatters are people who
register domain names that are identical or similar to
well-known marks, and then try to sell the domain to
the mark owner for an inflated sum of money. This has
been done to everyone from Julia Roberts and Bruce
Springsteen to the organization PETA and the financial
institution Paine Webber.
To protect trademark owners from cybersquatting,
Congress passed and President Clinton signed into law
the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act in
November, 1999. Under the Act, a trademark owner can
sue to collect damages and recover a domain name from
a person who, with a bad faith intent to profit,
registered a domain name that is identical or similar
to a distinctive or famous trademark.
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Numbers (ICANN) was also established around this time,
which authorized a supervisor of domain name
registrations, and adopted an on-line arbitration
system for resolving domain name disputes.
Proving Cybersquatter Infringement
In order to have a domain name canceled or
transferred to the trademark owner under law, the
owner must prove that:
(1) the domain name is identical
or confusingly similar to the trademark;
(2) the registrant has no right
or legitimate interest in the domain name; and
(3) the domain name has been
registered and is being used in bad faith.
Several celebrities have been successful in getting
their domain name from cybersquatters under ICANN,
including Nicole Kidman, Julia Roberts and Venus and
Serena Williams. Others have not been as successful,
like Sting and Bruce Springsteen. However, registering
a trademark to a name will provide added protection
against cybersquatters trying to benefit financially
from an already well-known domain name.
Should I Trademark My Name?
Trademark infringement existed before the Internet,
but the ease of registering domain names has increased
the challenges of trademark rights. Because anyone
from high school students to multi-million dollar
corporations can register domain names at little
expense, it may be a good idea to register your name
if you feel it could be threatened by a cybersquatter.
This is especially true for people whose names are
also their profession, like actors, car dealers, even
fashion designers. Designer Ralph Lauren has had his
name trademarked since 1972 for added protection.
Fashion designer Donna Karan found her trademark
useful when she fell victim to a dispute over her
name. A man unknown to her, Richard Wilson, had
registered the domain name www.dkny.biz. Karan had
already owned www.dkny.com and www.donnakaran.com, and
filed suit with the WIPO stating Wilson registered the
domain name in bad faith. The WIPO panel agreed with
Karan, requiring the domain name to be transferred
from Wilson to The Donna Karan Company.
How to Trademark a Name
Anyone whose name also identifies a business or
profession should consider trademarking their actual
name. If you are considering establishing a trademark
for your name, you should first perform a trademark
search with LegalZoom or by going to the U.S. Patent
and Trademark Office's (USPTO)
Web site at
www.uspto.gov , to determine if it is claimed as a
mark by someone else. The USPTO reviews trademark
applications for federal registration and determines
whether an applicant meets the requirements for
federal registration.
Please note, if you do not register your name you can
still use a mark you have adopted to identify the
source of your goods and/or services. Anytime you
claim rights to a mark, you may use the "TM"
(trademark) or "SM" (service mark) symbol, regardless
of whether you filed an application with the USPTO.
But, registering your mark will offer you added
protection under Trademark Law, including giving you
the ability to bring action in court concerning the
mark, and obtaining registration in foreign countries.
The mark ® can only be used after the mark is actually
registered with the USPTO.