Nov 3, 2005

Trademark Safeguard- Trademark Monitoring Service

A friend of mine recently filed a trademark application on their own with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO.) I provided some free advice to help them prepare their trademark application, but I digress.

Within two weeks of filing, they received a notice from Trademark Safeguard, which offers their trademark monitoring service. They will watch trademark filings and notify trademark owner of similar marks via email each week.

I only found out about this because my friend was concerned about the legitmacy of this service. While it is indeed an actual company, my friend was confused whether he actually had to sign up. The form itself looks similar to an official government document.

Their threshold for "similar" is a lot lower than that of the USPTO, so you often get notices for marks that are not really that similar- they just want to make sure you get your money's worth. Anyone with a valuable trademark should have their marks watched through such as service.

The problem I have is that USTPA is perhaps going too far with their solicitations. It looks more like correspondence from the USPTO than from a private company. The header states that it is "Form 104B 01/02 - Supplementary," and names USTPA in full. The font does look similar to the font on correspondence from the USPTO in trademark matters. The letter quotes trademark laws, and warns about allowing similar marks to exist- stating that they may weaken your mark. The letter does not state at all that USTPA is not associated with the USPTO in any form.

The client contacted me because they thought that this was indeed an official communication from the USPTO. The trademark application was filed before the USPTO with the contact info of my law firm as the correspondence address- and the USTPA used the info pertaining to the applicant to contact our client. I have received solicitations for trademark watch services before, and have forwarded them to my clients. I feel that this letter is almost deceptive, and in the end, also too expensive. They charge $395 per year. There are other services that can do so for less money, including your current trademark attorney.

1 Comments:

At 7/8/09 16:44, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Ditto

 

Post a Comment

<< Home