Eric Goldman, assistant professor of law and director of the High Tech Law Institute at Santa Clara University School of Law, called U.S.trademark law "a disaster" for search, and says it's unlikely to be resolved in the courts anytime soon.
The case has been wending its way through the courts for more than a year, and as Goldman notes, "it hasn't even gotten to the good stuff yet. At the national level, regarding the federal Americans with Disabilities Act claims, the class consists...
Or they may be an infringer, stealing copyrighted content from others and finding themselves subject to penalties by the search engines and the courts. For that you have to actually file a lawsuit, which must be done through the courts.
Jeffrey Rohrs of Optiem said that "courts are inherently unoriginal" in deciding actual court cases surrounding online trademark abuse because there are no precedents that are comparable, and often make a poor attempt to create an analogy from...
Jeffrey Rohrs of Optiem said that "courts are inherently unoriginal" in deciding actual court cases surrounding online trademark abuse because there are no precedents that are comparable, and often make a poor attempt to create an analogy from...