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14 - An alternative approach to dilution protection: a response to Scott, Oliver and Ley-Pineda

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 April 2010

Michael Spence
Affiliation:
Head of the Social Sciences Division University of Oxford; St Catherine's College Oxford
Lionel Bently
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Jennifer Davis
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Jane C. Ginsburg
Affiliation:
Columbia University, New York
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Summary

Introduction

The chapter by Scott, Oliver and Ley-Pineda makes a powerful case against both utilitarian and Lockean justifications of the protection of trade marks against ‘dilution’ or, as I prefer it, protection against ‘allusion’ to the mark. In so doing, they reinforce a common scepticism about this type of protection. To that extent, the chapter makes a significant contribution to our understanding of trade mark law.

There are, of course, claims of detail in the chapter with which I disagree. For example, the authors' discussion of the object of an intellectual property right fails adequately to take account of either the structure of the relevant regimes, or the ways in which they develop. Thus section 60(1) of the Patent Act 1977 introduces a list of potentially infringing uses of an invention with the words ‘… a person infringes a patent if, but only if, … he does any of the following things’. Section 16(1) of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 introduces a similar, but more specific, list with the words ‘[t]he owner of the copyright in a work has … the exclusive right to do the following acts in the United Kingdom’. The clear implication is that if a patent holder or copyright owner has ‘an open-ended set of use-privileges, control powers and powers of transmission’, they relate, not to the invention or the work, but to the legal right that is the patent or the copyright.

Type
Chapter
Information
Trade Marks and Brands
An Interdisciplinary Critique
, pp. 306 - 316
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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