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Rise of Social Media: Potential Risks of Trademark Infringement

IIPRD

The evolution and development of trademark law protect the right of manufacturers or sellers but the advancement of technology and the emergence of social media has bound lawmakers and interpreters to make a continuous intervention and take a comprehensive vigil over the various new issues related to trademark infringement.

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Trademark Infringement in the Digital Age

IP and Legal Filings

Trademark infringement has grown more complex and pervasive, ranging from counterfeit goods to digital squatting and keyword advertising. Using trademarks in domain names, linking, framing, meta-tagging, and framing are a few methods that could lead to trademark challenges.

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Intellectual Property Protections of Olympic Proportions: A Look at Tokyo 2020

IPilogue

the TOKYO 2020 EMBLEM ) are protected as an official mark but not under the OPMA, which may present difficulties as certain businesses look to the OPMA to check their compliance. . Rule 40 restricts social media posts and advertisements published by athletes and sponsors during the Games, both in volume and content.

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Smells like Luxury, Does it Cost a Trademark Battle?

SpicyIP

Recently, there has been an increase in the number of advertisements on social media for perfumes that offer the same fragrance as a luxury one at a reasonably affordable rate. Image from here Smells like Luxury, Does it cost a Trademark Battle? We will explore the relevance of this further ahead in this post.

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influencers aren't advertisers' agents, materiality can be common sense, & more in supplement case

43(B)log

Was this commercial advertising or promotion? Elysium argued that the website as a whole was a referral website for Tru Niagen, which advertised Tru Niagen at the top of every page. Thus, any false advertising claim would lie against Albaum, not [directly] against ChromaDex. You can find out more here: [link].

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Unreasoned Orders for Personality Rights

IP and Legal Filings

Using the name or image of a celebrity for brand advertisement or promotion in the US does not always attract liability, provided the brand is not falsely misleading the public that the celebrity endorses the product. Common law could potentially provide a solution, but passing off requires consumer confusion, which may not always be present.

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The “Bombay Frankie” Confirms That First Mover’s Advantage Remains Without Enforceable Trademark Rights

IPilogue

The motion court first hearing the case misapplied the fundamental principles of trademark law. because they were the first to file a trademark application for “Bombay Frankies” despite not having yet used the mark. s entitlement to the trademark manifests on the application date or registration date.

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