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The Trouble with THE
You may have heard by now that a certain Midwestern university that gets a lot of attention in this blog has filed an application to register the word THE as a trademark.
If the intent was to get press coverage, mission accomplished. The application was widely reported, and generally not in tones of admiration for the universityâs cleverness and foresight in protecting its valuable intellectual property. Many reported on the application with an air of stunned disbelief. Others offered their opinions about the matter, with headlines like these:
Opinion: Ohio State has market cornered on THE dumbest ideas (USA Today)
THE Ohio State University Applies For THE Stupidest Trademark In THE World (Techdirt)
Ohio Stateâs ludicrous application to trademark the word âtheâ (The Philadelphia Inquirer)
But is it really so stupid?
The Philadelphia Inquirerâs âThe Angry Grammarianâ was upset, possibly because he doesnât understand how trademark registrations work. He writes: âIf the school is successful, the rest of us canât use the without the Buckeyesâ permission, and youâre left reading Angry Grammarian in Philadelphia Inquirer.â Not exactly. (Reading further into his column, we learn that even he doesnât believe that.)
A trademark is an indicator of the source of a product or service, and if a word functions in that way, it can be registered. It doesnât mean the rest of us have to stop using that word â we just canât use it as a trademark in connection with the products or services for which it serves that source-indicating function.
But that isnât very clear, is it? An example: there is a certain company that brands its products with the name of a common fruit. APPLE is distinctive as a trademark for computers and phones, and Apple Inc. has registered it. You are still free to use the word to designate a type of fruit. You are free to use APPLE in a trademark provided it is not likely to create confusion â Mattel has registered APPLES TO APPLES for card games. You are not free to sell computers branded as APPLE. If Ohio State can make THE a brand the way Apple has made APPLE a brand, it is entitled to register THE as a trademark.
Arguably â and this may well be argued somewhere down the road â the Ohio State University has a special connection with the word âthe.â It famously bills itself as âThe Ohio State Universityâ rather than just âOhio State University.â Apparently this is a point of pride for people associated with the university, and it is a source of bemusement, and sometimes ridicule, for people not associated with the university. But if you were to ask people what university they associated with an emphasis on the word âtheâ in the universityâs name, I suspect that OSU would get quite a few more responses than any other.
So itâs not completely crazy that OSU might think that it could use THE as a trademark â that when we saw the THE brand, we would know it was associated with The Ohio State University. As a word that has no descriptive significance with respect to the goods or services with which it is used, the word would normally be considered âinherently distinctiveâ and entitled to registration upon proof that it is in fact being used as a mark.
Whether OSU (and shouldnât it be TOSU?) will succeed in registering the mark remains to be seen. In order to obtain a registration, you have to show evidence that you are using the claimed mark as a mark. Itâs far from clear that the specimens of use that OSU has submitted will accomplish that to the satisfaction of the Patent and Trademark Office. It is not uncommon for an application to be refused registration on the ground that the claimed mark is being used in an ornamental fashion, or that it fails to function as a mark. In other words, consumers are likely to see it as decoration or expression rather than as a brand. For example, the PTO refused an application to register the NO MORE RINOS! mark based on the specimen below (along with a sign and a bumper sticker) that, the PTO concluded, looked like expressive use rather than trademark use:
The LAGUNA SURF AND SPORT mark was refused as merely ornamental based on this specimen, on the theory that consumers would see the claimed mark as a decorative feature of the shirt rather than a brand of shirt:
The refusals make sense, particularly when the supposed mark is used on t-shirts and the like, which often have expressive content on them. The wearer can announce his or her viewpoint by wearing a shirt or cap that expresses that viewpoint. So the PTO is right to look carefully at supposed marks that are only used on the front of a shirt or cap. OSUâs application covers use of the mark with âT-shirts, baseball caps and hats.â
So what do OSUâs specimens in its application to register THE look like? Pretty much like the ones above. There is this shirt:
And this cap:
The âornamental useâ issue looks like it might very likely be a problem for this application â particularly if the PTO attorney examining the application is a University of Michigan alum. There would be ways to get around this problem â but Iâm sure a university that is so important that its name begins with the word âTheâ doesnât need me to suggest how to beat the refusal.