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Google To Be Sued in UK For Trademark-Linked Ads
Posted by
timothy
on Sun May 04, 2008 04:01 AM
from the some-people-are-idiots dept.
from the some-people-are-idiots dept.
nuke-alwin writes "Channel 4 news in the UK is reporting that Google will be sued by Lastminute.com for the way it sells advertising. Adverts from competitors will now be displayed when searching for some trademarks. Google says consumers will benefit. Some trademarks become so familiar that all similar products are known by the trademark name: Coke and Hoover, for example. I think searching for these kinds of words should allow competitors to advertise their similar products."
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Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:5, Informative)
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My first arguement would be
Is it illegal for a salesman at a department store to a different brand product than you initially were looking for?
I went to JB Hifi and asked for which iPod (trademarked) is the best. Does it have FM Radio? Are they best value?
Is it illegal to direct the consumer to an iRiver or Samsung player?
Is it illegal for a used car salesman to sell you a Toyota when you ask for an inferior Mitsubishi?
Re:Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:5, Insightful)
This has got to be to the consumers advantage. It lets us know what other companies operate in the same domain. OK, for supermarkets, this is pretty obvious, but less so for, say, Tool Hire. If I want to know about tool hire companies, I could type HSS and get a list of relevant companies, simply because I know of one. Poor example, as I could have just searched on "Tool Hire", but you take my point, I hope.
Parent
Re:Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem is that trademarks have become a form of property, rather than a mechanism to avoid misleading consumers.
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Re:Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:4, Insightful)
One company spends a fortune building a brand image and is so successful that it is *their* product's name that is the first thing you think of when you think of the generic product, and yet you think it's ok to use produce results for their competitors too?
I'm not sure I said that too clearly, but I hope you get the idea.
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Yes.
Re:Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:4, Insightful)
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As apt a description of what's wrong with Microsoft, General Motors and a hundred other major corporations as anything else I've heard lately.
Re:Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:5, Interesting)
Parent
Re:Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:4, Insightful)
This is what is often missed and it happened to me. I made a search for "serious magic" (a video f/x software). The first link on Google was paid, and it appeared to from the makers of the said software so I clicked on it. Imagine my confusion when I realized the site I landed on was a competitor's. This is really not OK in my book.
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Re:Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem is that Google is allowing deceptive advertising in its results. If they allow one company to pass themselves off as another then they will be sued and they will lose.
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Re:Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:4, Insightful)
You shouldn't sue Google, you should sue the company misrepresenting themselves.
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Re:Abuse of what trademarks are for... (Score:5, Insightful)
Google offer a search service and presented adverts for a competitor when customers searched for our company name. I didn't feel that Google's presentation (i.e. the word "Sponsored links" in small print) made clear enough to potential searchers that the advert was unrelated to our company, and there was a risk of a consumer thinking that this competitor was in fact us. If it had said "These advertisements may be unrelated to the trademark XXX" in clearer text, I'm not sure I would have had the same objection. I think it was a mild attempt at passing off, so I'm glad Google had this policy in place.
Parent
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That is the crux of it, google is not misrepresenting thier service as yours, the company who paid for the ad is doing the misrepresenting. Clause 6 of google's advertising terms and conditions [google.com.au] as it pertains to trademarks is no different to what one would expect to find when taking out an advert in print, TV or radio.
In your example google acted as I would expect any other responsible adverstising service to act and helped you to police your trademark when
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My gripe is with my competitors who are paying for this to happen, not Google in the first instanc
they better sue the phone book companies as well. (Score:3, Insightful)
boo fucking hoo.
Re:they better sue the phone book companies as wel (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, it's kind of hard to organize like this with the printed page. Too many combinations of "searches" for specific trade marked names. However, with dynamically generated content backed by a database it's a breeze.
I bet if the yellowpages had an online site, they'd do the exact same thing.....oh wait, they do: http://www.yellowpages.com/nationwide/name_search/wal-mart?search_mode=all&search_terms=wal+mart [yellowpages.com]
Look at the right side of the page, a long list of "Related Businesses".
For A Ransom of...$1. (Score:3, Funny)
Are the trademarks in question really generic? (Score:4, Insightful)
I've been reading the Wikipedia on genericized trademarks [wikipedia.org] (off-topic: shouldn't it be "generized"?) and it doesn't give too much information about the process of certifying the genericity of a trademark: it seems to happen per se if the trademark owner doesn't take steps to avoid genericization, and sometimes even if steps are taken. Would anybody please point me to a better reference?
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I don't think that's relevant; it's evidence for the argument, not a direct part of it.
The argument presented says that such adverts are useful because many people who search for a brand are actually looking for the product, not the brand.
This is also not relevant to whether they're legal. Given my understanding of trademark law, they are, but of course that carries the usual weight of an IANAL comment on slashdot :)
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Given my understanding of trademark law, they are, but of course that carries the usual weight of an IANAL comment on slashdot :)
On the other hand, the UK is pretty much in the US's back pocket these days - you know, the one round the back, in the middle. Strangely brown, and worn.
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As it happens I am from the UK. But UK and US trademark law are very similar AFAIK. (In fact I'm not aware of any major differences anywhere in the world).
Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] has some detail but to be honest I'm not all that interested :)
"Known" is not "marketed" (Score:3, Interesting)
"Known" in informal usage is one thing. Actually marketed that way is quite another. Would you expect to see Pepsi brand "coke" or Dyson brand "hoovers" being advertised?
If you allow your trademark to become a generic term, then eventually you may lose the protection it provides. Trademarks are defend-it-or-lose-it. I say may lose because AFAIK this particular principle, of using a trademarked term as a generic term in a commercial search, is a new legal area. So at least we know that a lot of lawyers will make a lot of money out of it. Which is nice.
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http://www.aspirin.com/faq_en.html [aspirin.com]
Protect a trademark or lose it.
Robots.txt (Score:2)
The pages at Google.com are google's property so I fail to see how this lawsuit can go anywhere.
~Dan
Oh please... (Score:2, Interesting)
If I put "lastminute.com" into Google, they've got about the top 6 links in the search page. The URL of their competitors is clearly shown elsewhere.
Are lastminute.com in trouble? Have they got SCO-level management fighting against the reality than anyone can set up what they do (and a lot of their site isn't "last minute" anyway).
You know what's funny? The most likely impact of this move is that more people will link to this slashdot article and drive this up the main inde
Again? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Imagine if a supermarket put up a big advertising board at the front of the store with pepsi branding and trademarks, but underneath it
"Internet" does not make something different (Score:2)
Think about that for a second.
Now, lets take it step further. Lets say I make a searchable yellow pages. It quite literally searches scans of the yellow pages and pulls up the pages that might have what you are looking for. You're going to see ads for competitors when you use trademarked words.
Of course though, this is in the UK, whose adver
Squarely on Google's side on this one (Score:2)
Google: keep it up, I'm rooting for you.
lastminute.com and Auto Trader: FY.
Suggestion (Score:2)
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Re:Coke and Hoover? (Score:4, Insightful)
I've heard the term 'hoovering' used to describe vacuuming. I think over in Englad it was more widely used that way. (That is if TV has actually taught me something.)
Parent
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Re:Coke and Hoover? (Score:5, Informative)
I think "hoover" tends to be quite common in some areas of the UK, but primarily amongst the older generation now.
You're quite right about "Xerox" and "Kleenex" though. I'd throw in to the list "Band Aid", "Post It" and "Biro".
It all depends on where you live though - different countries, and even different locations within countries are more or less likely to use these. For example, in Japan there's "almost" a verb for copying ("xeroxing") based on the name Ricoh (roughly "Ricohpying"). Or in some less developed countries, the world "Nescafe" is a synonym for "coffee".
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Re:Coke and Hoover? (Score:4, Interesting)
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http://english2american.com/dictionary/h.html [english2american.com]
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http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/VAX [reference.com]
Mod parent up, as they say... (Score:2)
It's not all that easy to lose a trademark -- Google is still in place, as is Xerox -- but the risk is there and it has happened, cf. the other examples above. In this case, if Google treats a search for "Tesco" as a search for "supermarket", and Tesco doesn't protest, Tesco is probably implicitly agreeing that their name is a generic name for a supermarket:
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