Where did 37 CFR § 2.17(g) come from?

US trademark practitioners are familiar with 37 CFR § 2.17(g), which says:

Duration of power of attorney.

  1. For purposes of recognition as a representative, the Office considers a power of attorney filed while an application is pending to end when the mark registers, when ownership changes, or when the application is abandoned.
  2. The Office considers a power of attorney filed after registration to end when the mark is cancelled or expired, or when ownership changes. If the power was filed in connection with an affidavit under section 8, 12(c), 15 or 71 of the Trademark Act, renewal application under section 9 of the Act, or request for amendment or correction under section 7 of the Act, the power is deemed to end upon acceptance or final rejection of the filing.

Where exactly did this Rule come from?  Whose idea was it?  I had always assumed that I knew where it came from, but recently I actually looked at the history of the Rule and I now think I was probably wrong in my assumption.  Maybe you know where exactly this Rule came from, in which case please post a comment below. Continue reading “Where did 37 CFR § 2.17(g) come from?”

A response from the Trademark Office on applicant email addresses

It is recalled that on February 6, 2020, the Acting Commissioner for Trademarks published an Examination Guide 1-20.  The Exam Guide set forth for the first time a requirement that trademark applicants and registrants reveal their personal email addresses to the Trademark Office, even in the case of an application that is represented by a US attorney.  According to the Exam Guide, the Trademark Office would then publish the email address for use by spammers. The Exam Guide gave nine days’ notice of this change which would take place on Saturday, February 15.

One hundred ninety-nine trademark practitioners sent a letter to the Acting Commissioner,  urging that this requirement of the Exam Guide be withdrawn.  You can see the letter here.  

In my blog article Trademark Office blinks on applicant email address, I reported that the Trademark Office backed down.  This happened at 4:32 PM on the Friday afternoon before the Saturday effective date of the objected-to email requirement. 

Instead of requiring that the email address revealed to the public be the personal email address of the applicant (an email address “regularly accessed and reviewed” by the applicant personally), the email address would be permitted to be any old email address of the applicant’s choice.  This was communicated in a revised Examination Guide 1-20 dated February 14, 2020.  

Now comes a letter from Acting Commissioner Hershkowitz in further response to the letter from the one hundred ninety-nine practitioners.  You can read the Acting Commissioner’s letter here.

I am posting the letter now so that everyone can see it as soon as possible.  Later I will publish a blog article discussing the letter in more detail.

A problem with USPTO’s new trademark CAR form

On February 15, 2020 the US Trademark Office scrapped its old forms for trademark address changes and revocations of powers of attorney and granting new powers of attorney.  In their place, the Trademark Office rolled out a new form called “Change Address or Representation Form”.  Part of the Trademark Office’s reason for changing things was, of course, the need to force any applicant or registrant to cough up an email address, even if the applicant or registrant is represented by US counsel.  The idea I guess is that this single form would be so flexible as to be able to handle any and all functions previously served by the half a dozen or so previous forms.  

Anyway, there’s a Big Problem with the form.  If you are an applicant and you want to fire your attorney, and proceed pro se, the form’s instructions say you can’t do it.  If you are an applicant and you want to fire your attorney, and hire a new one, the form’s instructions say you can’t do it. Continue reading “A problem with USPTO’s new trademark CAR form”

How much should you say in your Petition to Cancel?

I am reminded over and over again of the striking generosity and collegiality of the trademark practitioners who hang out in the e-Trademarks listserv.  Recently one member of the listserv asked (paraphrasing):

Our client’s trademark application received a Lanham Act § 2(d) refusal based on a senior registration which was last renewed in 2012.  We hired a trademark investigator who reported being unable to find any evidence that the senior mark is in use.  Our client wants to proceed with a Petition to Cancel that registration the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board.

Here’s the question: we have a pretty good report from the investigator regarding lack of web presence, business listings, address follow-up, etc. showing that the mark isn’t in use. Does it make sense to put any of that into the pleading, by factual allegation, attaching an affidavit, or otherwise?  I frankly don’t expect a response but anything’s possible.

Many members of the listserv offered comments about how much to put into the Petition.  I’ll summarize some of the comments here, and I will add a couple of thoughts.  Oh, and if you are a trademark practitioner, and if you have not yet joined the e-Trademarks listserv, what’s your excuse?  Maybe you should join.

Continue reading “How much should you say in your Petition to Cancel?”

Trademark Office blinks on applicant email address

Earlier this week, one hundred ninety-nine trademark practitioners wrote to the Acting Commissioner for Trademarks expressing concerns about the Examination Guide 1-20 dated February 6, 2020 that would require trademark applicants to reveal their personal email addresses to the USPTO, which would then publish those email addresses.  You can see the letter here.  The bad thing that was imminent was that on Saturday, February 15, 2020, trademark applicants would have to do this.

The Assistant Commissioner blinked.  This happened at about 4:32 PM on Friday, February 14, 2020, 28 minutes before closing time for the week at the USPTO.  Now there is a revised Examination Guide 1-20.  You can see the February 14, 2020 version of Examination Guide 1-20 here.

Here is how the Assistant Commissioner characterized the revision:

The USPTO has recently heard concerns from some stakeholders regarding the potential for misuse of owner email addresses for owners represented by an attorney. In order to address these concerns, and balance them against the need for contact information concerning registrations, the USPTO is reissuing the examination guide issued February 7, 2020. The revisions to the guide remove the requirement that an applicant represented by counsel must regularly access and review the email account provided. This change clarifies that Trademark owners who are represented by counsel may provide an email address of their choice in the Trademark owner email field of Trademark filings, including an email address created specifically for this purpose by the owner or their attorney or an email address that is set up to only receive emails from the USPTO. The email address cannot be identical to the listed primary correspondence email address of the applicant’s or registrant’s attorney.

The USPTO notes that a pro se or unrepresented Trademark applicant’s or registrant’s “owner email address” will be the same as the applicant’s or registrant’s “correspondence email address” and will be the address to which the USPTO sends all notifications and communications.

The USPTO is continuing to explore additional improvements, including potentially masking email addresses, and will provide notice of any such system updates in the future.

The trademark community has averted at least some of the great harm that would have flowed from this ill-conceived Examination Guide, but at great cost.  One of the costs was that one hundred ninety-nine trademark practitioners had to put aside their regular activities for much of Sunday and much of Monday to draft and revise and sign this letter.

Trademark Office blinks on domicile address

Readers will recall my recent blog post where my client wanted to renew a trademark registration, but my client did not want to let the Trademark Office start using a street address for postal correspondence.  My client wanted the USPTO to continue using a post office box for postal correspondence, just as the USPTO had done for the past decade.  After several months of trench warfare, the Trademark Office blinked.  The Trademark Office has given up on trying to deny our client the ability to use its post office box, and we have our renewal.  We won, but it is unfortunate that it took months of trench warfare and a lot of time and money to win. Continue reading “Trademark Office blinks on domicile address”

One hundred ninety-nine trademark practitioners

I dropped off a Federal Express courier package just now.  Inside is this letter to Meryl Hershkowitz, the Acting Commissioner for Trademarks.  You can track the package here.  Barring some surprise it should be delivered at the Trademark Office tomorrow (Wednesday, February 12) by 10:30 AM.

The substantive content of the letter will be no surprise to the Acting Commissioner, because I emailed a PDF of it to her yesterday as you can see here.  In other words she and her colleagues have already had twenty hours to consider the substantive content of the letter.  But what will be different when the courier package arrives tomorrow is that the Acting Commissioner and her colleagues will have an opportunity perhaps for the first time to see how many signers we ended up with (one hundred and ninety-nine) and how many trademark applications they collectively filed and/or prosecuted to issuance in the past decade (one hundred ninety thousand) and how much money they have collectively paid to the USPTO in the past decade (one hundred million dollars).

She will also see the names of the signers.  My guess is that she and her colleagues will recognize many names of trademark practitioners whom they respect and have known for many years, indeed decades.  My guess is that she and her colleagues will recognize names of law firms from which some of the signers are drawn.  

There are not words sufficient to express how honored I feel to be part of this online community of trademark practitioners who gave of their time and their energy and their professional reputations to tell the Trademark Office things that perhaps the Trademark Office did not want to hear.  

The document triggering this letter is an Examination Guide that the Trademark Office made public on the evening of last Thursday, February 6. The document revealed for the first time some measures said to be planned to take effect a mere nine days later, on Saturday, February 15.  The honor that I feel being part of this online community of trademark practitioners is only made stronger by the realization that the signers managed to accomplish this drafting and revising and finalizing and signing in a mere three days.  This leaves a few days remaining between now and February 15 during which, it is hoped, the Assistant Commissioner and her colleagues may revisit and perhaps even revise or postpone the plans set forth in the February 6 document.

The letter to the Commissioner for Trademarks has been received

click to enlarge

Hello Colleagues.

Here is the PDF file that I emailed to Acting Director Meryl Hershkowitz earlier this evening.

And here is the email that I received back from her.

Now what needs to happen next, folks?  What needs to happen next is that an infinite number of trademark practitioners and trademark applicants need to e-sign the letter.  To do this, click here.  The opportunity to sign is open until mid-afternoon tomorrow Tuesday February 11th.  Please consider signing.

What will happen is (hopefully) that lots of additional people will e-sign.

Carl Oppedahl

 

 

 

 

The letter to the Commissioner for Trademarks is now locked

Okay, folks, the letter to the Acting Commission for Trademarks is now locked, but for correction of clear errors such as misspelled words or factual mistakes.  There is a new paragraph in the middle about the rulemaking timeline and I would be grateful if people can check it for correctness.

Anyway the point now is to round up a lot of signatures.  As of just now on Monday afternoon we have more than eighty-five signers who collectively represent about eighty-seven thousand trademark filings and prosecutions-to-issuance over ten years and who collectively represent about sixty million dollars in fees paid to the USPTO over ten years.

So let’s please have a real push now to get as many signers as possible.  Of course one cannot know for sure what might make a difference to the Acting Commissioner for Trademarks, but having a larger number of signers might make a difference.

To see the letter, and to see how to sign it, click here.

 

Please consider signing this letter to the Commissioner for Trademarks about applicant email addresses

Hello blog readers.  I imagine readers of this blog have been following the new Examination Guide which was published just this past Thursday February 6, and which will take effect this coming Saturday February 15.  According to the Guide, starting on this coming Saturday a trademark applicant, even if represented by an attorney, will be required to disclose his or her personal email address in the US trademark application.  The email address will be published in TSDR in the “documents” tab.  This will of course get harvested by scammers and spearphishers and worse.

My best guess is that many readers would react to this with the feeling that the Trademark Office needs to mask the email addresses, just like it masks the attorney bar information.

With that in mind, an informal group of trademark practitioners is going to send a letter to the acting Commissioner this coming Tuesday evening.  She would find it on her desk on Wednesday morning.   

The point of this email is to let you know of the effort. If you would like to join the informal effort, you can.  See blog.oppedahl.com/?page_id=5405 .