Trademarks, Comparative Advertising, and Product Imitations: An Untold Story of Law and Economics

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Standard

Trademarks, Comparative Advertising, and Product Imitations: An Untold Story of Law and Economics. / Dornis, Tim W.; Wein, Thomas.
In: Penn State Law Review, Vol. 121, No. 2, 03.2017, p. 421-470.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{9e7432dbe3fe4d9b9ee86b30b4eaeba1,
title = "Trademarks, Comparative Advertising, and Product Imitations: An Untold Story of Law and Economics",
abstract = "Comparative advertising is a daily phenomenon in the modern landscape of commercial communication. Interestingly, however, a deep dichotomy exists between the American legal doctrine on comparative advertising and its European counterpart. Whereas American lawyers have cultivated a rather liberal stance, Europe has preserved its historical penchant for prohibiting comparative advertising. This divergence is puzzling when it concerns the handling of so-called imitation claims and product comparison lists, especially with respect to luxury perfumes and smell-alikes, or other exclusive products and their cheaper imitations. European lawmakers, pressured by the French perfume industry, have integrated a per se prohibition on imitation claims into the European Directive on Misleading and Comparative Advertising. On the other hand, in the U.S., there is virtually no restriction on imitation claims and comparison lists beyond the prevention of consumer confusion and deception. Indeed, the Lanham Act expressly excludes trademark dilution claims in cases of comparative advertising. To date, however, there has been no comprehensive economic analysis of this panorama. This article seeks to fill that gap. In conducting such an analysis, it reveals severe defects in both the American and European rules on comparative advertising. It also provides the basis for a more specific reconceptualization of the field and helps formulate a theoretical and practical framework for lawmaking and policymaking. ",
keywords = "Law, Trademark, unfair competition, Comparative Advertising, Law & Economics, Perfume Comparison Lists, Dilution, Misappropriation",
author = "Dornis, {Tim W.} and Thomas Wein",
year = "2017",
month = mar,
language = "English",
volume = "121",
pages = "421--470",
journal = "Penn State Law Review",
issn = "1545-7877",
publisher = "Pennsylvania State University Press",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Trademarks, Comparative Advertising, and Product Imitations: An Untold Story of Law and Economics

AU - Dornis, Tim W.

AU - Wein, Thomas

PY - 2017/3

Y1 - 2017/3

N2 - Comparative advertising is a daily phenomenon in the modern landscape of commercial communication. Interestingly, however, a deep dichotomy exists between the American legal doctrine on comparative advertising and its European counterpart. Whereas American lawyers have cultivated a rather liberal stance, Europe has preserved its historical penchant for prohibiting comparative advertising. This divergence is puzzling when it concerns the handling of so-called imitation claims and product comparison lists, especially with respect to luxury perfumes and smell-alikes, or other exclusive products and their cheaper imitations. European lawmakers, pressured by the French perfume industry, have integrated a per se prohibition on imitation claims into the European Directive on Misleading and Comparative Advertising. On the other hand, in the U.S., there is virtually no restriction on imitation claims and comparison lists beyond the prevention of consumer confusion and deception. Indeed, the Lanham Act expressly excludes trademark dilution claims in cases of comparative advertising. To date, however, there has been no comprehensive economic analysis of this panorama. This article seeks to fill that gap. In conducting such an analysis, it reveals severe defects in both the American and European rules on comparative advertising. It also provides the basis for a more specific reconceptualization of the field and helps formulate a theoretical and practical framework for lawmaking and policymaking.

AB - Comparative advertising is a daily phenomenon in the modern landscape of commercial communication. Interestingly, however, a deep dichotomy exists between the American legal doctrine on comparative advertising and its European counterpart. Whereas American lawyers have cultivated a rather liberal stance, Europe has preserved its historical penchant for prohibiting comparative advertising. This divergence is puzzling when it concerns the handling of so-called imitation claims and product comparison lists, especially with respect to luxury perfumes and smell-alikes, or other exclusive products and their cheaper imitations. European lawmakers, pressured by the French perfume industry, have integrated a per se prohibition on imitation claims into the European Directive on Misleading and Comparative Advertising. On the other hand, in the U.S., there is virtually no restriction on imitation claims and comparison lists beyond the prevention of consumer confusion and deception. Indeed, the Lanham Act expressly excludes trademark dilution claims in cases of comparative advertising. To date, however, there has been no comprehensive economic analysis of this panorama. This article seeks to fill that gap. In conducting such an analysis, it reveals severe defects in both the American and European rules on comparative advertising. It also provides the basis for a more specific reconceptualization of the field and helps formulate a theoretical and practical framework for lawmaking and policymaking.

KW - Law

KW - Trademark

KW - unfair competition

KW - Comparative Advertising

KW - Law & Economics

KW - Perfume Comparison Lists

KW - Dilution

KW - Misappropriation

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 121

SP - 421

EP - 470

JO - Penn State Law Review

JF - Penn State Law Review

SN - 1545-7877

IS - 2

ER -

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. The effect of neighbor species' phylogenetic and trait difference on tree growth in subtropical forests
  2. Challenges for biodiversity monitoring using citizen science in transitioning social-ecological systems
  3. Rahmenbedingungen von Zuwanderung und interkulturellem Zusammenleben in den ostdeutschen Bundesländern
  4. Methodik der Landschaftsbildanalyse bei der Umweltverträglichkeitsprüfung von Offshore-Windenergieparks
  5. The impact of foreign takeovers: comparative evidence from foreign and domestic acquisitions in Germany
  6. Do Cytotoxic Chemotherapy Drugs Discharged into Rivers Pose a Risk to the Environment and Human Health?
  7. Influence of Equal-Channel Angular Pressing on the Microstructure and Texture of Mg-Zn-Y-Zr-RE Alloy Sheets
  8. Signs, traces and integration of the sustainability concept in higher agricultural education in Germany
  9. Ankunfts-, Entscheidungs- und Rückführungszentren (AnkER-Zentren) – Erwartungen und kritische Bestandsaufnahme
  10. Pionierinnen der Willkommenskultur. Strukturen und Motive des ehrenamtlichen Engagements für Geflüchtete
  11. Deciding between the Covariance Analytical Approach and the Change-Score Approach in Two Wave Panel Data
  12. Promoting landscape heterogeneity to improve the biodiversity benefits of certified palm oil production
  13. Micro-scale Thermodynamic and Kinetic Analysis of a Calcium Chloride Methanol System for Process Cooling
  14. Rethinking gender: feminist perspectives on Sustainable Development Goals in the light of (re)productivity
  15. Gender- und diversitygerechte Didaktik der Weiterbildung zur Unterstützung des (gesellschaftlichen) Lernens