06
May
2020
Major changes in the French Trademark Prosecution
Author:
teamtaomanews
The long-awaited upheaval in French trademark law is finally here!
Directive (EU) 2015/2436 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 December 2015 to approximate the laws of the Member States relating to trademarks has been transposed in France, at last, following the adoption of an order dated November 14, 2019.
This transposition entails a major overhaul of French trademark law and practice in certain aspects and notably regarding the application and renewal of trademarks.
=> The end of the requirement of graphical representation
Until now, to be eligible to a protection under trademark law, a sign needed to be capable of being represented graphically. Such condition has been abandoned by the new regulation. This abonnement does not necessarily open protection to non-traditional trademarks that were previously refused, such as olfactive or gustative marks, as the legislation still requires the sign applied for to be represented on the Register in a manner which enables anyone to determine precisely and clearly the subject matter of the protection afforded to its proprietor.
Yet, some non-conventional trademarks that were rarely accepted in the past will likely be adopted more easily now, as new formats of representation will become available. For instance, with respect to sound trademarks, it will now be possible to submit audio files, while for the representation of motion trademarks or hologram trademarks, the applicant will be able to furnish video files, gifs, etc.
If opening the trademark filing to new representation formats seems to be good news for future applicants, this will necessarily generate practical issues, in particular in the context of litigation. From now on, how should be compared a traditional verbal mark and a sound mark represented by an audio file? In this specific case, what will become of the visual comparison?
This new disposition will, no doubt, change significantly the office’s practice, which would have to get creative in developing new reasonings.
=> New official taxes
While the old system provided for a single flat fee for the filing of a trademark from one up to three classes, with an additional class fee from the third class onwards, the reform abandoned it in favor of a system of one fee per class.
The same system has been adopted for the renewal of trademarks.
=> Examination
The new disposition broadens the list of grounds for refusal, especially, the number of signs that can constitute opposable prior rights to the filing of a new trademark application. This will make it even more necessary to carry out prior right searches before considering filing any trademark application, as the sign for which registrations will be sought is likely to face more types of obstacles.
Now the following applications can be refused by the French Office:
Signs consisting exclusively of “the shape or other characteristic of the product imposed by the nature of the product itself, necessary to obtain a technical result or which confers substantial value on the product”. The reference to “another characteristic of the product” is new and broadens the ground for refusal specific to shape marks, which can now be applied more broadly and to all marks, and in particular to atypical marks whose filing is facilitated.
A trademark including “appellations of origin and geographical indications, traditional wine names and guaranteed traditional specialities” protected by national or European Union legislation or by international agreements.
A trademark consisting of the name of an earlier plant variety.
A trademark that has been filed in bad faith by the applicant.
The new provision also makes the lack of distinctiveness a proper and independent ground for refusal when, in the past, it was closely link to the condition of non-descriptiveness. Distinctiveness and non-descriptiveness are now two different conditions that a mark should comply with in order to be registered.
=> A new deadline for the renewal of trademark registrations
If, in the past, a trademark could be renewed up to the last day of the expiration month, the renewal would have to be filed, from now on, before the end of the expiration date. An additional period of six months is still allowed to proceed with such a renewal, subject to the payment of an additional fee. The starting point of this 6-month grace period is no longer the day after the expiration month but the day that follows the expiration date.
Our team is at your disposal to assist you and help you to better understand all the workings of this reform.
Blandine Lemoine
Lawyer
Jean-Charles Nicollet
European Trademark & Design Attorney
Head of Legal Department
14
April
2020
A new chance for the European Union trademark application “FACK JU GÖTHE”
The word mark “FACK JU GÖTHE” can be registered as a European Union trademark, decided the Court of Justice of the European Union in a decision dated February 27, 2020. This decision overrules the European Union intellectual property office (EUIPO) decision, confirmed by the General Court, that this applied-for mark was contrary to the Article 7, (1), (f), of Regulation No.207/2009 [1], namely, contrary to principles of morality which.
As we have seen in our previous news concerning the opinion of the Advocate General Bobek (read our TAoMA News of July 18, 2019 in French), the company Constantin Film Produktion Gmbh, filed in 2015 the European Union Trademark Application “FACK JU GÖTHE” before the EUIPO. If this sign is intended to designate various goods or services of daily life, it is also the title of a German comedy movie which enjoyed great success in German-speaking countries and had several sequels.
The EUIPO, approved by the General Court, refused registration of this word sign on the ground that the first words “FACK JU” were phonetically identical to the English insult “FUCK YOU” and that the sign taken as a whole was therefore an expression of bad taste, offensive and vulgar, by which the writer Johann Wolfgang Goethe was posthumously insulted [2], and this, notwithstanding the applicant’s arguments as to the context surrounding the release of the film bearing the same name.
Constantin Film Produktion GmbH then brought an appeal before the Court of Justice against the latter decision, alleging, inter alia, errors in the interpretation and application of Article 7(1)(f) of Regulation No 207/2009, which excludes from registration trademarks “contrary to public policy or to accepted principles of morality”.
Following the reasoning of Advocate General Bobek, the Court, in its decision of 27 February 2020, annuls the decisions of the General Court and the EUIPO.
According to the Court, the EUIPO and the General Court disregarded the standards required by Article 7(1)(f) of Regulation No 207/2009, in the light of which it is necessary to carry out an analysis of all the elements specific to the case in order to determine precisely how the relevant public would perceive the sign in question.
Indeed, the EUIPO, as well as the General Court, relied solely on an abstract assessment of that mark and of the English expression to which the first part is assimilated. But the Court considers that they should have examined more carefully the social context and the factual elements invoked by the applicant and should have explained more conclusively the reasons why these elements had been left out of its analysis.
Among these factual elements, there was more than convincing evidence: in particular, the great success of the comedy movie of the same name and the fact that its title does not appear to have caused controversy among the German-speaking public. In addition, the young audience had been allowed to see the film when it was released and was the primary target. Finally, the Goethe Institute, which is a reference in the promotion of the German language on a national and worldwide level, used it for educational purposes.
Furthermore, the Court underlines the fact that the perception of the English expression “FUCK YOU” by the German-speaking public is not necessarily the same as its perception by the English-speaking public. While it is true that this expression is well known to the non-English-speaking public, its semantic content may be slightly different or even diminished in a foreign language. It is especially true in the present case because the first part of the trademark application at issue does not consist of the English expression as such, but of its phonetic transcription in German, accompanied by the element “Göthe”.
In the light of all these factors, the Court considers that the EUIPO and the General Court misinterpreted and misapplied Article 7(1)(f) of Regulation No. 207/2009 and, accordingly, cancels the corresponding decisions.
Finally, as we indicated in our previous TAoMA News, Constantin Film Produktion GmbH also invoked freedom of expression as an element to be taken into account in the assessment of Article 7(1)(f) of Regulation No. 207/2009. While the Court is less affirmative than its U.S. counterpart (the U.S. Supreme Court has recently ruled that the US Trademark Act on immoral, misleading or scandalous trademark is contrary to the freedom of expression guaranteed by the US Constitution, see our TAoMA News of July 4, 2019 in French), it acknowledges, for the first time to our knowledge, that freedom of expression must be taken into account when applying this provision of trademark law in order to ensure respect for fundamental rights and freedoms, in particular in accordance with Article 11 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union [3].
The future of the trademark “FACK JU GÖTHE” is now in the hands of the EUIPO which will, for the second time, have to proceed with its examination. Full of learnings, the decision of the Court should probably influence the latter and lead to the registration as a trademark.
Baptiste Kuentzmann
Lawyer
Read the decision on CURIA.
[1] Article 7 (1)(f) Regulation (EU) 207/2009: “1. The following shall not be registered: (…) f) trademarks which are contrary to public policy or to accepted principles of morality”. Applicable provision in this case, now replaced by Regulation (EU) 2017/1001 ;
[2] EGC, January 24, 2018, T-69/17, Constantin Film Produktion/EUIPO (Fack Ju Göthe) ; Fifth Board of Appeal of the EUIPO, December 1, 2016, R 2205/2015-5, (Fack Ju Göthe) ;
[3] Article 11 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union: “1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers.”
27
March
2019
Article 13: should you worry?
Author:
teamtaomanews
The copyright directive, proposed by the European Commission on September 14, 2016, was just approved in a modified and final version, on March 26, 2019, by the European Parliament. We would like to review all the fears aroused by its “article 13” – now article 17 – as of the issuance of the proposal more than two years and a half ago.
Like any directive, this text will have to be transposed into national law by each of the 28 (or 27?) EU Member States and will not be applicable as such (as opposed to the regulations, such as the GDPR that did not have to be transposed). The directive only lists goals to be reached and lets the Member States decide of the ways to reach them (for example, with an obligation or not to use automatic filtering system).
This directive, all along the negotiations process, raised many concerns and we wished to make things clear about each of the fears and questions that invaded the web, in particular about its “article 13” that became article 17 in the final version but that will forever stay “Article 13”…
What’s that Article 13?
Article 13 consists in:
Ending the ISP’s protection status (“safe harbor”) of host provider extended by the case law to the platforms: the host providers’ liability was shielded in case of prompt withdrawal of litigious content, and replacing it by an a prioriliability;
Paying the authors through license agreements that are not mandatory for their beneficiaries (point 1 of the article);
When the beneficiaries do not want to enter into a global license agreement, compelling the platforms to cooperate and thus to withdraw the litigious content (point 4);
When no authorization was granted by the beneficiaries, making the host providers liable for the litigious content unless they show that they did everything to obtain the authorization; made their best efforts to make the copyrighted content unavailable; promptly withdrew or deny access to the content, after receiving a notification from the beneficiaries. Principle of proportionality will determine whether the host providers complied with their duty to cooperate namely in view of the number of visitors, the size of the platform, the type of uploaded material, the efficiency of the means and their cost for the host provider;
Allowing the users to appeal the withdrawal of their content through a system of internal board of appeals (point 8);
Compelling the platforms to install automatic filtering systems, except for platforms of less than 3 years making an annual turnover of less than 10 million euros. When these platforms gather over 5 million users, they also have to show that they made their best efforts to prevent the uploading of copyrighted contents for which the authors had made specific requests (point 4aa).
Is it going to make SMEs’ life more complex, as GDPR did?
The European Parliament reduced the SMEs’ burden that the Commission initially put on their shoulders. They will not have to install systems of automatic filtering even when license agreements are negotiated with the beneficiaries (point 7). However, the smallest platforms will have no choice but to accept signing such license agreements.
Will I be taking risks when showing trademarks in my videos?
No, nothing changes in terms of trademarks. The directive only affects copyright, not trademark law. It does not change anything to the fact that it is already possible, without being held liable, to show, voluntarily or not, an item bearing a protected trademark in the uploaded content. It is for example the case of this famous spirit trademark in a video of Liza Koshy. This trademark is not used “in the course of trade”: using it is not infringing the attached rights.
What about copyrighted works? Is it going to be forbidden to show them, even on a corner of the screen and for less than one second?
Even though the European Commission had not drafted it in its proposal, the European Parliament added to the adopted version of the directive that copyright exceptions would prevent the directive from applying. Consequently, it will still be possible, as it is now, to:
Reproduce a short extract of a copyrighted work to illustrate a general speech (quoting a sentence from a novel, showing the excerpt of a theater show, using a few seconds from a song…) as done for example by youtuber Mark Edward Fischbach in this video showing a few seconds of The Simpsons;
Include a protected work as part of a larger whole such as the Louvre Pyramid by Ieoh Ming Pei (an architectural work still under protection) in a video about Paris or a Walt Disney character on the wall of a youtuber’s bedroom, as long as these works are not the principal object of the video (exception of “accidental inclusion” or of “panorama”);
Parodying a work to make fun of it, use it to make fun of something else or produce a humoristic content, as does this video using an excerpt from the movie “Downfall” combined with a speech of Barack Obama before the Congress;
And of course, it will still be possible to use freely works belonging to the public domain.
These exceptions depend on national legislations and might defer from one Member State to another.
I heard that article 13 means the return of censorship…
As long as copyright exceptions are preserved, the directive will never have the effect to “censor” the uploaders. Monitoring systems of copyrighted works might become more efficient and give rise to more automatic withdrawals. But these withdrawals will be justified by copyright infringements. Copyright is, surely, a limitation to freedom of speech as it allows to forbid the uploading of a copyrighted movie without the authorization of its beneficiaries, for example. But it is not accurate to refer to it with the word “censorship” because this limitation to freedom of speech is based in the law and in fundamental and constitutional rights in all EU Member States, namely by Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights. The word “censorship” implies the idea of an arbitrary interference which makes it inaccurate – unless the fears aroused by “Content ID” proved to be justified, see last question below.
Is it true that the memes will be banned?
The memes are parodical images including potentially copyrighted material, such as this 2016 parody of Game of Thrones relating to the transfer of power from Barack Obama to Donald Trump:
These pictures use a copyrighted work (Game of Thrones) and parody it with the addition of the presidents’ faces. On the face of it, this meme infringes the moral rights of the authors (no mention of the author’s name, unauthorized alteration of the work) as well as their economic rights (unauthorized reproduction of the work, no remuneration of the authors). However, this memeis not an infringement because the copyright exceptions protect it from a request to withdraw: the image is a parody and it is used to make fun of Donald Trump depicted as a terrifying and pitiless ruler.
Memes are not jeopardized by the directive, de jure.
But if the exceptions still apply, is anything going to change?
First, if the copyright exceptions are included in the directive, it means that the host providers will not have the overwhelming task to withdraw all existing content using protected works thanks to these exceptions!
What will change is most of all the way to pay the beneficiaries. They will be paid through license agreements or on a case-by-case basis, by the host provider and by the uploader while, until now, only the latter was paying the authors for the works used in the uploaded content, based on a share of the advertising revenues that the host provider was paying to the uploaders. This is one of the reasons why the host providers were lobbying against article 13.
Then, it is true that the changes might not be visible to all the users. Thus, the host providers already set up, these last years and namely in France, filtering systems to prevent the upload of protected content. For example, through the monitoring of key words but also through robots. They also withdraw the content that is notified as infringing, outside of any license agreement. Finally, they already started creating procedures of appeals against withdrawals. For example, YouTube (property of Google), offers an online procedure of copyright takedown notice, but also a procedure of appeal against the withdrawal. YouTube also set up a form to appeal a “Content ID” claim and even a possibility to appeal the confirmation of withdrawal after the appeal against the Content ID claim (same link). YouTube anticipated the implementation of article 13.
Experienced users might already be circumventing the automatic filtering systems when uploading their content: the battle of technology is not fought by the bulk of the troops of the users, but it is, as always, way ahead of the legal norms.
How does this automatic filtering robot “Content ID” work?
This robot is able to understand that a YouTube user is trying to upload a movie or part of a movie for which its beneficiaries requested the protection. Thus, if a YouTube user tries to upload on his or her channel the last Warner or Universal movie release and that these companies made a Content ID request, the uploading is automatically blocked. The same problem will happen if the uploader only includes an excerpt from the movie in the video.
The problem is the coexistence of this automatic filtering system and the copyright exceptions (parody and citation). Indeed, the beneficiaries have the possibility to set a default authorized duration of excerpts. This is why, precisely, procedures of appeal against Content ID claims were set up. But since these procedures are most of the time in favor of the beneficiaries, the uploader has no other option than referring to judicial courts to obtain a decision in favor of his or her freedom of speech.
It is of course impossible for this robot to monitor all musical and audiovisual copyrighted works (movies, TV shows, video clips, etc.). Thus, the automatic filtering will only apply to a small selection of copyrighted works. The host providers’ major fear is that the automatic filtering could be imposed in the frame of license agreements as a performance obligation and not as a best-efforts obligation: in the first case, they would be liable if the robots do not detect the unauthorized use of a copyrighted work; in the second, they would not be liable if they show that they made their best efforts to enforce the automatic filtering with their technological tools and human means.
Gaëlle Loinger-Benamran
Partner
European Trademark and Design Attorney
and
Jérémie Leroy-Ringuet
Attorney at Law