Institute for Information Law & Policy

From the Student Research Fellows Blog: Two of my Favorite Things

Craft beer and intellectual property are two of my favorite things.  Recently, they've been running into one another more often, for better or worse.  More broadly, the beverage industry holds many opportunities for students of IP and information law.  Trademark law has recently brought to light issues over the scope of protection, dueling marks within registration classes, and plenty of name disputes.  Other interesting areas of law that are involved include commercial speech, advertising, and administrative law.  For example, does the New York State Liquor Authority have the power to prohibit a brewery from using a frog giving the finger as its logo?  Or to get between me and my Freaky Ice?  At the federal agency level, can the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms prevent a brewery from using the name of its town on a bottle cap?  In 2008, they tried.

Issues can be broken into three loose categories: a company seeking broad protection for a style or drink name, the "did you ask your lawyer first" category, and established brands policing uses of similar marks.  The first category traces its roots to the famous 1977 decision finding the use of "Lite" in reference to low-calorie beer to be a generic term.  There's been recent chatter in some online forums about conflicts over brewers using the same style of beer in a product's name, for example the many "90 Shilling Ales" on the market.  However, none of the disputes have really escalated.  Moving over to the mixed drink category, Goslings Rum Company's trademark registration for "Dark 'n' Stormy", a popular mixed drink combining ginger beer and dark rum, caused a bit of a stir (pardon the pun) thanks to a July 2009 New York Times article.  Enforcement seems highly impractical, and one blogger suggested there's a naked licensing issue since the recipe is widely available to customers who then request bartenders to make the drink.

It's hard to keep track of all the recent naming disputes in the beer industry.  A Belgian brewery recently asserted their US-registered mark for "Brugse Zot" against Pennsylvania brewer Weyerbacher's "Zotten."  Rather than fight it out, Weyerbacher changed the name.  Another currently pending case involves Bear Republic Brewing Co.'s complaint against Central City Brewing Co. for infringement of their RACER and RED ROCKET marks and associated trade dress.  The complaint provides illustrations of plaintiff's marks and defendant's allegedly infringing RED RACER marks.  You be the judge. 
This article on the appropriately re-named Disputin notes a few more similar situations.  Maybe law isn't the answer, as the Avery Collaboration not Litigation Ale demonstrates.

Bridging categories two and three is an example that illustrates the importance of fair use and the limits of trademark rights, and the legitimate interests of larger companies with well-known trademarks.  New England Brewing Co. got a letter about their Imperial Storm Trooper Stout from a certain Mr. Lucas, who didn't think much of the brewery's (fair?) use.  An $8 billion licensing program doesn't take these things lightly.  It's not like they were creating a missile defense system or anything.  To be fair to Lucasfilm, which just suffered a serious legal setback in the UK, the brewery used more than just a recognizable reference in the beer's name.  See photo here.

Finally, we come to the dispute between Monster Energy Drink and Rock Art Brewery over the latter's "Vermonster" beer.  While the two companies eventually reached an agreement over use of their respective marks, the controversy got the attention of Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy, whose recently introduced trademark reform bill would require a study of "whether large corporations are misusing the trademark laws to harass small businesses by exaggerating the scope of their trademark protection."  At the same time, we can't forget that larger corporations have strong interests and in some cases legal and/or shareholder obligations to enforce the strength of their mark. 

We'll be continuing the dialogue and debate on these and other issues in the beer, beverage, and food industry on March 18, thanks to the indispensable work of Student Research Fellows Marc Miller and Kaydi Osowski. We hope you'll join us.  The details are below.

-Joe Merante

IP Surprise: Beer & Beverage, Business, and Trademark Reform

The IILP is excited to welcome Rock Art's attorney, Douglas K. Riley of Lisman, Webster & Leckerling, PC of Burlington, VT for a discussion of of his intellectual property practice, which includes many interesting issues related to Vermont's burgeoning "artisan foods" industry.  Joining him will be Lauren Mandell, Senior IP Counsel at Diageo North America, one of the largest alcoholic beverage brand owners in the world, to discuss her practice.  Professor Dan Hunter will moderate this practice and policy oriented discussion of the trademark interests of small businesses versus those of large brands, how to reform and refine the rules to accommodate both interests more equitably, and the ways that trademark law and litigation affect the results.

The event will take place Thursday, March 18 from 6-8pm in Room W402 @ New York Law School, 185 West Broadway, Manhattan.  Please RSVP to Naomi Allen, naomi.allen@nyls.edu

March 04, 2010 in Events at NYLS, Food and Drink | Permalink | Comments (0)

Tal Zarsky Visit

On October 8, 2007. Tal Zarksy of the Faculty of Law at the University of Haifa gave a lunchtime colloquium talk in the Institute office. Dr. Zarsky discussed his paper "E-Contract Doctrine 2.0: Standard Form Contracting in the Age of Online User Participation." In it, he and co-author Shmuel Becher argue that blogs, wikis, discussion boards, and other online fora create a qualitatively new channel for consumers to learn about terms in form contracts. The room-filling group of NYLS students and faculty in attendance then engaged Dr. Zarksy in a discussion of his paper and its implications.

October 10, 2007 in Events at NYLS | Permalink | Comments (0)

Upcoming Patent Law Events

Tuesday, October 2: "The Many Faces of Law Firm Patent Practice:  litigation, prosecution, transactional, combinations of same."
5:00 – 6:30 PM
Board Room (40 Worth St, 14th Floor)

Guest Speaker: Charles Weiss, Kenyon & Kenyon, L.L.P.
http://kenyon.com/attorneys/bio.aspx?attid=320932305
Sandwiches and drinks will be served.

Tuesday, October 9: "The Shape-Shifting Subject Matter Requirement of U.S. Patent Law: A Practical and Practitioners' Take"
9:30 – 10:45 AM
Room A300

Guest Speakers:
John A. Squires, Chief Intellectual Property Counsel, Goldman, Sachs & Co.
http://www.iipi.org/nav_about/boards.asp#John_A._Squires
and
Thomas S. Biemer, Partner, Dilworth Paxson LLC
http://www.dilworthlaw.com/attorneys/biemer
To prepare for this lecture, we recommend the following 2 readings:

  1. Merges, Robert P., Intellectual Property in the New Technological Age, pp. 1043-57 (State Street Bank); and
  2. "Patent Law 101..." (Squires and Biemer) http://dotank.nyls.edu/IP_Fall_2007/Class_Files/squiresbiemer.pdf

Spaces are limited. Please RSVP to Yeen Tham (ytham05@nyls.edu).

Download iilp_patent_reception_poster.pdf

October 02, 2007 in Events at NYLS | Permalink | Comments (0)

Patent Law Mentoring Reception

On August 30, 2007, the Institute for Information Law and Policy held its first Mentoring Reception to kick off its new Patent Law Program. The Patent Law Program aims to provide students the opportunity to develop greater expertise and experience in patent law and to signal this important qualification to the legal marketplace. At this reception, our guest speaker, Manny Schecter, Associate General Counsel, Intellectual Property Law at IBM, spoke about patent law careers in the corporate setting.

----------------
About the Speaker

Manny W. Schecter is the Associate General Counsel, Intellectual Property Law, at IBM.  In his current position, Mr. Schecter advises on IBM intellectual property legislative and policy matters.  He also guides the intellectual property law organizations that support IBM’s services and sales organizations.  Mr. Schecter has been employed by IBM for over 20 years, including positions in Burlington, VT, Arlington, VA, Tucson, AZ, Yorktown Heights, NY, and his current position in IBM corporate headquarters in Armonk, NY. 

Mr. Schecter organized the patent quality initiatives announced jointly among IBM, the USPTO, and the open source software community and he serves on the Steering Committee for the Peer-to-Patent:  Community Patent Review initiative.  Mr. Schecter is the vice-chair of the AIPLA Electronics and Computer Law Committee and he has spoken at numerous USPTO, IPO, AIPLA, and other IP related events.

Mr. Schecter is a graduate of Cornell University and the George Washington University Law School.  He is admitted to practice law in Arizona, the District of Columbia, and New York, and he is registered to practice before the US Patent & Trademark Office.

----------------
About the Patent Law Program

To provide our students with the opportunity to develop greater expertise and experience in patent law and to signal this important qualification to the legal marketplace, the Institute for Information Law & Policy will offer a new Patent Law Program, open to all interested students. Students will be eligible to list the qualification on their resumes and will receive a certificate issued by the Institute. Their names will be published in the program at graduation and published in the other print and on-line materials of the Institute.

The Patent Law Program is open to law students who are eligible, as determined by the United States Patent and Trademark Office, as well as to those who are not eligible, to sit for the Patent Agent Exam (also called the Patent Bar Exam). Generally, to be eligible, you must have a science or technology undergraduate degree or have fulfilled the appropriate course requirements after graduation. Patent “prosecutors” (those who file the applications) must have taken the exam. Details on the requirements are available at http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/dcom/olia/oed/examregist.htm. Patent litigators do not have to take the exam nor must they have a science background.

How to Sign Up?

Fill out the form at http://www.nyls.edu/pdfs/ApplicationforthePatentLawCertificateProgram.pdf and return it to Prof. Beth Noveck at the Institute Office at 40 Worth Street, Suite 706. Students will be able to enroll in the Patent Bar Study Group via Banner. The Course is listed in the Fall as 82181, Friday 10am-1pm and Spring, 12274, Friday 10am-12pm.

For more information about the Patent Law Program, visit http://www.nyls.edu/pages/5735.asp.

August 31, 2007 in Events at NYLS | Permalink | Comments (0)

Universities Allied for Essential Medicines - National Day of Action

The NYLS chapter of Universities Allied for Essential Medicines will be holding a signature drive WEDNESDAY April 18 in the STUDENT CENTER from 3:30-8pm.  The drive is to promote access-minded licensing in order to make drugs and treatments created in American universities available to those who need them in developing countries.  The event is just part of a massively coordinated effort by the students of over 40 top medical and law schools.  We are asking the NYLS community to stop by and donate their signatures to our cause and join the thousands of students and faculty members from universities across America who are also taking action.

More information can be found here: http://www.essentialmedicine.org/action/

The Philadelphia Consensus Statement is attached below.
Download PhiladelphiaConsensusStatement.pdf

April 17, 2007 in Events at NYLS | Permalink | Comments (0)

Intellectual Property Course Selection Workshop

Tuesday, March 27 Room B 500 1-2PM

The Intellectual Property Law Society will hold a Course Selection Workshop on Tuesday, March 27th from 1-2 PM in room B500. The workshop will provide students interested in registering in Intellectual Property courses with information about the various IP courses offered at New York Law School and provide a forum to ask questions. Professors Beth Noveck and David Johnson as well as Kenneth Norz and Kirk Burkhalter from Academic Affairs office will be attending to provide course information and answer questions. 

Pizza and refreshments will be provided.

If you have any questions please contact IPSociety@gmail.com.

-----------------------------------------

The IP Society has created a website\wiki to allow students to post questions related to IP courses prior to the workshop at:

http://nyls-ipcourses.pbwiki.com

We encourage you to add your own questions. To edit the wiki, click the "edit" tab. When prompted, enter the password: ipsociety. Faculty members will post answers and questions & answers from the workshop to this site will also be added.

March 26, 2007 in Events at NYLS | Permalink | Comments (0)

Symposium on Intellectual Property Licensing

The Institute for Information Law and Policy invites you to attend the annual Symposium on Intellectual Property Licensing. The IP Licensing and Drafting professors and guest speakers will present specialized topics about drafting and negotiation.

Friday, March 16, 2007
Room A700

9:15-10:00 - Jay Kogan, Character Licensing
Jay Kogan is the Deputy General Counsel for DC Comics and MAD Magazine. His primary areas of practice include print, film, television, multimedia and online publishing and licensing, and he is the company’s chief intellectual property counsel.

10:15-11:00 - James Rosini and Greg Boyd, Licensing in the Videogame Industry
James Rosini is a partner at Kenyon & Kenyon in New York and has over 25 years’ experience in litigation and counseling matters concerning all aspects of intellectual property, including patents, trademarks, copyrights and unfair competition as well as related entertainment, publishing, music, computer,  Internet, domain name and right of publicity issues.
Dr. S. Gregory Boyd is an associate at Kenyon & Kenyon in New York. He has worked in intellectual property litigation, licensing, and counseling and has a special interest in interactive entertainment, financial services, and medicine.

11:15-12:00 - Terry Ilardi, Open Source Licenses
Terry Ilardi is a Copyright Counsel for IBM Corporation where he is responsible for handling copyright and open source matters at the corporate level.

12:15-1:00 Judith Prowda, Alternative Dispute Resolution and IP Licensing
Judith Prowda is an attorney, mediator and arbitrator in New York and specializes in copyright, art and entertainment law.

1:15-2:00 - John Kenny, Patent Licensing and Its Relevance to Non-Patent Attorneys
John Kenny is a partner at Kenyon & Kenyon in New York and has worked primarily on infringement litigation and patent interferences.

Attendance required for members of the Intellectual Property Licensing and Drafting Course.

The Symposium is open to NYLS community on a first-come-first-served basis.

Seating is limited.  Please RSVP by 3/15 to Yeen Tham at ytham@nyls.edu.

Download iilp_symposium_poster.pdf

The Symposium on Intellectual Property Licensing Podcasts are available at:
https://deimos.apple.com/WebObjects/Core.woa/BrowsePrivately/nyls.edu.1290734817

February 28, 2007 in Events at NYLS | Permalink | Comments (0)

James Dawson - The New Technology Demands of Lawyers - 11/15

The Institute for Information Law and Policy presents "The New Technology Demands of Lawyers" featuring James F. Dawson, IT/AD Litigation Support, Legal Affairs Corporate Systems at Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.

Wednesday, November 15 – 6:30 – 7:30 PM
Institute for Information Law and Policy
40 Worth Street, Suite 706

Please RSVP to Yeen Tham at ytham05@nyls.edu by Tuesday, November 14.

Mr. Dawson at MetLife will speak to us on technology in the corporate legal setting.  He will discuss collections in data collections in messaging and compliance.

November 03, 2006 in Events at NYLS | Permalink | Comments (0)

Follow up on E-Discovery discussion featuring Steven Harber

For those who missed the October 11th e-discovery discussion featuring Steven Harber, we've provided a summary and some relevant links below.

Speaker: Steven Harber
NYLS, Class of 1992
President and Co-Founder, DiscoverReady
www.discoverready.com
DiscoverReady is the first national professional services firm focused exclusively on Discovery Management.

Mr. Harber is an NYLS alum ('92) who founded his own company to help corporate clients efficiently weed out irrelevant email records in the course of producing documents in discovery. He described the structure of the newly developing, large, market for "Discovery Professionals". He stressed the need for law students to learn about technology, project management, budgeting, outsourcing and the many new opportunities to provide legal services more efficiently and effectively. He discussed the likely impact of new Federal Rules and recommended that all students attend the TechShow in New York in early February (we'll have a certificate field trip). It was an inspiring talk and provided ample evidence of the value of thinking outside the box when planning your career.

E-Discovery Software:
Attenex – www.attenex.com
Kroll – www.krollontrack.com/ediscovery
LexisNexis: Applied Discovery – www.lexisnexis.com/applieddiscovery
Preston Gates & Ellis – www.ediscoverylaw.com (for blogs and updates on caselaw)

Legal Tech Show
LegalTech is the largest and most important legal technology event of the year.
January 29 - 31, 2007
The Hilton New York Hotel
New York, NY
www.almevents.com/r5/cob_page.asp?category_id=41146

NYLS Certificate of Mastery in Law Practice Technology
Demonstrate your understanding and use of electronic discovery technology to potential employers. Submit a proposal for the Certificate program.
For more information, visit www.nyls.edu/pages/3855.asp.
Contact: Prof. David Johnson djohnson@nyls.edu or davidr.johnson@verizon.net

October 12, 2006 in Events at NYLS | Permalink | Comments (0)

Steven Harber - E-Discovery & Other Emerging Tech Trends

"Electronic discovery and other emerging technology trends affecting the practice of law"

Featuring

Steven R. Harber
President and Co-Founder of DiscoverReady
NYLS, Class of 1991

Students can make themselves more marketable before and valuable after they join a firm by being familiar with technology, related e-discovery case law and the process of email review and production. Steven Harber will speak about alternate career paths and the role of the “Discovery Specialist,” attorneys who possess strong technology and project management backgrounds.

Wednesday, October 11
1 – 2 pm
Boardroom, 40 Worth Street, 14th Floor, Rm. 1423

Lunch provided.

RSVP to ytham05@nyls.edu.

Continue reading "Steven Harber - E-Discovery & Other Emerging Tech Trends" »

October 03, 2006 in Events at NYLS | Permalink | Comments (0)

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