Trademark Objection
Trademark Objection
An application for registration of a trademark can be objected by the Trademark Office for a number of reasons. In this article, we look at the top reason for trademark objection.
Trademark Objection
Once a trademark application is filed, a Trademark Examiner examines the the application and makes a search of earlier trademarks – which are identical or similar to the mark being examined. The findings of the Trademark Examiner are compiled as the trademark examination report.
Use of Incorrect Trademark Form
In case the trademark application is not made on the proper form, an objection as following is raised by the Trademark Examiner.
“The application is made on form TM-1, for certification mark in respect of goods or services falling in a class, the form of the application should be corrected as TM-4 by filing a request on form TM-16.”
Corrective Action: The applicant can overcome this objection by requesting to correct trademark application by filing a request on form TM -16.
Incorrect Trademark Applicant Name
The trademark applicant name must be entered properly in an application, as suggested in this article. In case of incorrect trademark applicant name, the Trademark Examiner would raise an objection as follows:
“The application appears to have been filed in the name of a partnership firm, names of all Partners of the firm should be brought on record by filing a request form TM-16”
Corrective Action: The applicant can overcome an objection for incorrect trademark applicant name by requesting to correct trademark application by filing a request on form TM -16.
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Trademark vs Copyright vs Patent
Trademark | Patent | Copyright | |
---|---|---|---|
What’s protected | Any word, phrase, symbol or design that recognizes and differentiates the source of one party’s goods from those of another. | Inventions, such as procedure, manufacturer, composition, machines of matter as well as improvements to these. | Books, articles, music, photography, sculptures, dances, sound recordings, motion films and other original works of authorship. |
Requirements for protection | A mark must be distinguishable, in the sense that it must be able to identify the source of a certain good. | A fresh, valuable, and unusual invention is required. | A work must be unique, original, and created in a tangible manner. |
Term of protection | As long as the mark is used in commerce. | 20 years | Author’s life span+ 70 years. |
Rights Granted | Right to use the mark and to prohibit others from using identical marks in a way that could create confusion about the goods or services’ origin. | Right to restrict others from manufacturing, selling, or importing the patented invention. | Copyrighted works have the power to dictate their reproduction, creative works, circulation, public performance, and display. |