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Is it Illegal For Competitors To Bid On My Companys Name As A Keyword

         

inferno

2:31 pm on Jul 17, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



i have researched this for a while, and have read 2 very different opinions, here is the only one with actualy facts stated:
from [news.com.com...]


Online cosmetics company iBeauty settled a year-old lawsuit filed by beauty giant Estee Lauder by agreeing to banish the words "Estee Lauder," "Clinique" and "Origins" from a list of keyword search terms.
Many Web sites embed keywords and phrases into their Web pages to trigger banner ads during Web searches. In iBeauty's case, a person searching on Excite@Home's search engine for "Clinique" would have been presented with a banner ad for iBeauty. In addition, the search would have returned a list of related Web sites, including iBeauty.com.

In January 1999, Estee Lauder sued iBeauty and Excite@Home, saying its trademarks were violated when iBeauty's ads were presented during searches for Estee Lauder trademarks. The companies announced today that iBeauty voluntarily agreed to strike the words from its list.

Trademark experts said Estee Lauder had a strong case given the uniqueness of the names "Estee Lauder" and "Clinique," which do not exist independently in the English language.

When Playboy sued Excite and Netscape Communications in 1999 in a similar case, a federal judge ruled against the company because the terms "playboy" and "playmate" are part of common English usage. That case is still scheduled to go to trial.

Intellectual property attorney Ken Dort, who is not involved in either case, said the more unique the trademark, the better chance a company has to protect it.

"What everybody's taken from the Playboy case is that you can use a generic word but not a word that is clearly a trademark," said Dort. "In terms of trademarks, you have various grades. Words like 'white bread' you can't trademark, whereas 'Kodak' is the perfect example."

Dort said the Internet has not changed the fundamental principles of trademark infringement, but it has made infringement easier and more efficient.

"The one thing the Internet has done, it's amplified everything. We're talking about exponential-type expansion. If somebody's going to infringe a trademark, they can do it relatively quickly and efficiently, and a lot of harm can be done."

Online trademark and copyright infringement has drawn much attention, most notably in the Recording Industry Association of America's lawsuit against music-swapping company Napster. The RIAA alleges that Napster illegally promotes and facilitates the exchange of copyrighted music. This case is expected to be heard by a federal appeals court in September.

i want to be sure before i confront my competitors about this, is it legal for them to bid on my terms? if not i will give them a C&D letter.

Does anyone know?

jpenguin

6:26 pm on Jul 17, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



According to a legal precedent (Geico vs. Google), it's not illegal. [webmasterworld.com...]

inferno

2:17 am on Jul 18, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



so they can bid on my name, and subsequently i can bid on theirs right?

andrea99

3:39 am on Jul 18, 2005 (gmt 0)



and subsequently i can bid on theirs right?

Ahhh, that would seem the natural thing to do. Google would love such a bidding war. But would calling your competitor and agreeing to not bid on each other's names be price fixing?

eWhisper

1:01 pm on Jul 18, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Might want to look into the AdWords trademark complaint procedure as well:

[google.com...]

arinick

2:48 pm on Jul 18, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



In my experience, Google makes it a point not to get involved in any trademark disputes but may offer to monitor usage of your trademarked name if you request. However, this will only be in ad text and definitely not in the keywords being bid on by your competitors.

mikelfc

9:28 pm on Jul 18, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Might not be a lot you can do except make it clear in your ad that you are that company and not just sell similar products.

moftary

12:08 am on Jul 19, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



When searching for my company name in google, it's ranked #1 in serps though the comptetion on the name. But I see sponsored results targeting my company name, however the advertiser is absolutely out of my niche market and I have no idea what's the purpose of doing so.