Description
Internet Intermediaries and Trade Mark Rights
Routledge Research in Intellectual Property Series
Language: EnglishKeywords
Trade Mark Infringements; Trade Mark Proprietors; Internet Intermediaries; UK Supreme Court; Navigation Providers; E-Commerce Directive; Trade Mark Rights; Trade Mark; Trade Marks Directive; Info Soc Directive; CJEU’s Ruling; Contributory Infringement; Trade Mark Law; EU Charter; Registered Trade Mark; EU Law; Trade Mark Protection; DMCA Safe Harbour; Accessorial Liability; Defendant ISPs; Secondary Party; Joint Tortfeasors; Keyword Advertising; Copyright Context; Louis Vuitton
Publication date: 12-2021
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Paperback
Publication date: 06-2019
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Hardback
Description
/li>Contents
/li>Readership
/li>Biography
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Despite the apparent advantages of the internet, there is little debate that it facilitates intellectual property infringements, including infringements of trade mark rights. Infringers not only remain hidden by the anonymity the internet provides but also take advantage of its increasing reach and the associated challenges with regard to cross-border enforcement of rights. These factors, among others, have rendered the internet a growing source of counterfeit and other infringing products. It has, therefore, become necessary for right holders to shift their focus from individual infringers to internet intermediaries, such as Internet Service Providers (ISPs), hosts and navigation providers, which are responsible in numerous ways for making content promoting infringements available to internet users.
In light of these developments, this book conducts a comprehensive analysis of the liability of such intermediaries for trade mark infringements and considers the associated issues and challenges in the diverging approaches under which liability may be imposed. At present, however, neither UK trade mark law nor English common-law principles relating to accessorial liability provide a basis to hold internet intermediaries liable for trade mark infringements. As such, this book considers approaches adopted in some of the Continental European countries and the US in order to propose reforms aimed at addressing gaps in the existing legal framework. This book also examines alternative remedies, such as notice and takedown and injunctions, and discusses the associated shortcomings of each of these remedies.
Foreword by Graeme B. Dinwoodie
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
1 The internet, intermediaries and trade mark infringements
2 Liability under trade mark law
3 Accessory liability
4 Approaches elsewhere—across the English Channel and the Atlantic
5 A proposal for law reforms
6 Notice and takedown
7 Notice and takedown and its impact on legitimate third-party uses of trade marks
8 Injunctions against intermediaries—legal basis
9 Injunctions against intermediaries—practical considerations
Bibliography
Index
Althaf Marsoof is an assistant professor at the Nanyang Business School, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.