Spend a couple of minutes filling out a simple questionnaire. This will initiate your trademark registration process.
We perform a thorough trademark search to check whether the trademark is already in use before proceeding with the application.
Finally, we prepare, and register your trademark application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
Trademarks identify your products and services as distinctly belonging to your brand, distinguishing you from competitors. You can register a trademark for different types of intellectual property including your business name, product name, tagline, logo, symbol, or design. A registered trademark must be used in commerce to provide real protection against anyone who wants to copy you. Registering a trademark can be a complicated process, but attorneys can walk you through the steps and file your application.
A trademark means that a business name, brand name, tagline, logo, symbol, or design is registered with the USPTO, and that its use by others is restricted. Registering a trademark is a legal process of providing protection against competitors who want to copy your branding.
Register your name, slogan, or logo today to protect your brand identity.
Start My BusinessThere is a high chance that the trademark you are planning to register for yourself has already been registered by another. This enables the previous owner to object your trademark registration. Before filing an application to register a trademark, it is wise to perform a comprehensive trademark search as it saves a lot of your effort, time, and money. It is essential to check your trademark beforehand because it won't be refunded once you have paid the USPTO fee. This compressive trademark search ensures the originality and authenticity of your trademark.
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While copyrights and registered trademarks both help protect your intellectual property, they are used for different things.
Copyrights cover creative works such as stories, poems, song lyrics, movies, and even software code.
As soon as you create a piece of art or pen the lyrics of a song, you establish ownership. There is a legal process that you can—and should—use to gain better legal protection.
A person’s copyright lasts for the length of their life plus 70 years. There are different rules for pieces that are created anonymously or under a pseudonym.
Trademarks are used to protect brand names, business names, product names, logos, and slogans. They ensure that a brand can use its assets to build recognition and differentiate itself.
While you gain some protection as soon as you start using your brand name and logo, you need to register a trademark with the USPTO to really protect your brand.
As long as you renew your trademark—after the first five years, then every 10—it will not expire.
Get the comprehensive tools you need to run and grow your business with confidence.
Deter competitors from stealing your branding—and profiting from your reputation.
Create a brand as unique as you, knowing it can be preserved.
Secure the exclusive rights to your names, slogans, and logos.
Build a powerful brand that’s yours alone with the ® symbol.
Be empowered to legally claim your unique branding.
Make it easier to sue competitors who steal your trademarks.
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Once properly registered, trademarks generally need to be renewed by filing a Declaration of Continued Use. The first Declaration of Continued Use is usually due between the 5th and 6th anniversary date of the filing. The next renewal usually falls between the ninth and tenth year. Thereafter renewals are generally every ten years. Federal Mark Pro provides notice of the applicable deadlines and allows filing of the necessary paperwork via its personalized portal with just a few clicks of the mouse or with some minor updated information.
At the five-year mark, assuming continued use of the mark, we can also help file a “Declaration of Incontestability,” which provides additional protection under trademark law. This may prevent others from contesting the trademark on several common grounds, such as: (1) the mark is not inherently distinctive; (2) it is confusingly similar to a mark someone else began using first; or (3) the mark is simply functional as opposed to identifying the source of the goods or services.
Yes, changes can be made to an application, though the process and fees vary based on the timing. If you need to make adjustments before the trademark is published in the Official Gazette, simply log into your Federal Mark Pro account and request the change. Additional fees to Federal Mark Pro and filing fees to the USPTO may apply.
For changes after the trademark is published in the Official Gazette, a Post-Publication Amendment is generally required. Federal Mark Pro can assist with this process.
The extent of the amendment determines whether a new application is necessary. For example, changes that expand the scope of a description or add international classes may require extra fees and a new application. Clerical errors, however, are usually easy to fix and don't typically require a new application or affect your place in line.
Yes, a trademark can be sold, licensed, or assigned just like any other business asset. Validity requirements still apply, meaning someone must continue to use the mark in commerce, and it is beneficial to register assignments with the USPTO. If you enter into such an agreement, Federal Mark Pro can assist with transferring the trademark with the PTO. Often, individuals register a mark before a company is officially established. Once the company is formed, the mark needs to be transferred to the company.
Trademark infringement occurs when a trademark or service mark is used without authorization on or in connection with goods and/or services in a way that is likely to cause confusion, deception, or mistake about the source of those goods and/or services, according to the USPTO.
According to the USPTO, the key factors considered in most cases are the degree of similarity between the marks at issue and whether the parties' goods and/or services are sufficiently related that consumers are likely to assume (mistakenly) that they come from a common source. Other factors that courts typically consider include how and where the parties' goods or services are advertised, marketed, and sold; the purchasing conditions; the range of prospective purchasers of the goods or services; whether there is any evidence of actual confusion caused by the allegedly infringing mark; the defendant's intent in adopting its mark; and the strength of the plaintiff's mark.
Trademark dilution is an infringement theory alternative to consumer confusion. According to the USPTO, a trademark owner may claim trademark "dilution" by asserting that it owns a famous mark, and the use of another mark diminishes the strength or value of the trademark owner's mark. This can happen through "blurring" the mark's distinctiveness or "tarnishing" the mark's image by associating it with something distasteful or objectionable, even if there is no likelihood of confusion.
A Cease and Desist Letter is sent to an alleged infringer to notify them of the alleged infringement and to give them a deadline to stop infringing. Often, the alleged infringer will comply voluntarily, and the issue is resolved without further action. However, if the cease and desist letter is ignored, it can be used in a lawsuit to demonstrate that the alleged infringer was aware of the infringement and continued in bad faith. This may lead to additional damages in a lawsuit.
A cease and desist letter is different from a cease and desist order, which is signed by a judge and has the force of law. To obtain an order, a lawsuit must be filed, and the order must be issued by a court.
In a trademark infringement claim, the plaintiff must prove ownership of a valid mark and that their rights are "senior" to the alleged infringer's. This means that if someone was using the mark before it was registered with the USPTO, they might be allowed to continue using it as they did before the registration was issued. However, this senior use may be restricted to its geographic area or specific goods or services.
When a plaintiff has a federal trademark registration on the Principal Register, it creates a legal presumption of the mark's validity, ownership, and the exclusive right to use the mark nationwide for the goods or services listed. These presumptions can be challenged in court.
Therefore, even if someone else is using a similar mark, they may not be infringing if their use predates the USPTO registration.
According to the USPTO, the key factors considered in most cases are the degree of similarity between the marks at issue and whether the parties' goods and/or services are sufficiently related that consumers are likely to assume (mistakenly) that they come from a common source. Other factors that courts typically consider include how and where the parties' goods or services are advertised, marketed, and sold; the purchasing conditions; the range of prospective purchasers of the goods or services; whether there is any evidence of actual confusion caused by the allegedly infringing mark; the defendant's intent in adopting its mark; and the strength of the plaintiff's mark.
a court order (injunction) that the defendant stop using the accused mark;
an order requiring the destruction or forfeiture of infringing articles;
monetary relief, including the defendant's profits, any damages sustained by the plaintiff, and the costs of the action; and
an order that the defendant, in certain cases, pay the plaintiffs' attorneys' fees.
Conversely, a court may find instead that (1) you are not infringing the trademark, (2) a defense bars the plaintiff's claim(s), or (3) other reasons exist why the trademark owner is not entitled to prevail. The risk to filing a suit is that sometimes courts will invalidate a trademark registration by ruling it is too generic and not worthy of protection notwithstanding the USPTO may have granted a registration.
To learn more about an efficient way to remove infringing material online, read more about our DMCA Takedown services.
Reach out to us today to safeguard your intellectual property.
Reach out to us today to safeguard your intellectual property.