Legal Issues

Legal Issues

by Mike Masnick




Should Google Have Anything To Do With Ad Trademark Questions

from the nope dept

Google keeps running into lawsuits concerning companies who buy advertisements based on the names or trademarks of their competitors. We've already explained why should be perfectly legal under trademark law (which doesn't prevent all use of a trademarked term - just any use that is seen to be confusing people into believing one company is another company). However, this NewMediaZero piece points out that, even if it is a trademark violation, it makes no sense to go after Google, who is simply the publisher. If they must go after someone, the complaining companies should go after those who they are accusing of misusing their trademarks: the competitors buying the ads. Of course, what this article leaves out is that the complaining companies are upset that Google appears to be profiting off of their trademark by selling the ads. I wonder what would happen if Google set up a "compromise" position where a portion of the money that an advertiser paid for advertising on a trademarked keyword went to the trademark owner?

2 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
 

Reader Comments

(Flattened / Threaded)

    May 4th, 2004 @ 1:32pm
  • Uh-uh.

    by Oliver Wendell Jones

    If Google were to set aside some of the money to be paid to the copyright holder, they would in essence be admitting that they are participating in copyright violation.

    There are two possible avenues to take:

    1) Admit that selling ad-words based on copyrighted terms is wrong and stop doing it, at which point Google loses advertising revenue, or

    2) Take the standard corporate approach, deny any wrong-doing, claim that even if there is any wrong-doing it's "not their fault", and proceed to generate ad revenue.

    If you were in management of a money making organization, which route would you choose?

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

    • May 4th, 2004 @ 1:50pm
    • Re: Uh-uh.

      It's NOT a copyright issue, but a trademark one. Those are two very different things.

      Besides, there's a third route, which appears to be what they're doing, and which I believe is the proper route: point out that selling keywords based on trademarked terms is not a violation of trademark.

      As I've said before, it's the exact same thing as having your products placed next to each other on store shelves... Or, as someone else pointed out (with an even better example) having the cashier at a grocery store hand you a coupon for a competing product after you buy one product.

      (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

Add Your Comment

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now.
Get Techdirt’s Daily Email
Plain Text HTML
Save me a cookie
  • Plain Text: A CRLF will be replaced by break <br> tag, all other allowable HTML is intact
  • HTML: No formatting of any kind is done without explicitly being written in
  • Allowed HTML Tags: <b> <i> <p> <a> <em> <br> <strong> <blockquote> <hr> <tt>
Close
Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now.
Get Techdirt’s Daily Email
Plain Text HTML Save me a cookie

Search Techdirt
And now, a word from our Sponsors..



Subscribe to Techdirt's Daily Email Newsletter

Techdirt's Daily Email Newsletter

Related Stories
Close
E-mail It