Trademark, copyright or patent? Non-lawyers - and even many lawyers - are confused about what type of intellectual property protection is needed
You have something great . . . a software program, music, a name for your product or service, an invention or a logo.
Do you apply for a patent? A copyright? A trademark? Something else?
Let's start with basics so you can understand what those words really mean.
Patents
Patents protect ideas or inventions.
In other words, if you come up with a new gadget or a better way to manufacture something, that may be patentable.
And ideas - as well as tanbigle items - can be patented. For example, new exercise routines can be patented.
If your idea is novel, and no one else has done it quite that way before, you should consult a patent attorney to see if you can patent your idea.
Copyrights
While patents protect the idea itself, copyrights protect the expression of the idea.
For example, a song is the expression of a musical idea, and so is copyrightable.
Likewise, the text on a website or in a brochure describing your company's services can be copyrighted.
And any artwork - including logos, graphics, video and photographs - can be copyrighted.
Trademarks
While patents protect the ideas, and copyrights protect the expression of the ideas, trademarks protect the goodwill in a product or service. Specifically, trademarks protect the association in consumers' minds between a company and its goods or services.
For example, let's say that Acme Corporation makes a popular soft drink called Fizz-Good. The important trademark isn't Acme Corporation, because consumers don't care about the company's name in this example, they care about the name of their favorite soda. Fizz-Good is the brand name people know about, what they look for when they want that particular soda taste and experience.
Names are not the only things which can be trademarked.
You can also trademark:
- Logos
- Designs
- Slogans
- Sounds
- Colors
- Smells
For example, a unique shape for a soda bottle might be entitled to trademark protection.
And remember the "Intel Inside" commercial from the 1990's? Remember the 5-note sound which played at the end of the commercials? That sound is trademarked as U.S. Trademark Registration Number 2315261 (described as "a five tone audio progression of the notes D FLAT, DFLAT, G, D FLAT and A FLAT.") The musical sequence is entitled to trademark protection because consumers associate the music with the company Intel and its computer processors.
Similarly, if a phamaceutical company makes a drug with a unique color, the color may be trademarkable for use in that context.
Even smells can be trademarked (for an aftershave or perfume, for example).
Other Types of Intellectual Property
There are other types of intellectual property, including:
- Trade secrets
- In certain countries, "moral rights"
- Other types
Experienced intellectual property lawyers can conduct an "intellectual property inventory" to determine what ideas, expressions and sources of goodwill you have, and then help you protect them.
Contact: Alex Floum
(925) 933-9800
afloum@williams-firm.com














Comments
Thank u mr.floum 4 the very helpful info on intellectual property! Helps us know what to consider in our music biz!
You have said absolutely NOTHING! Why should I
pay up the rear for something I can PROVE is MINE?... The insult to injury over creative
rights goes on and on, doesn't it. Fleeced with unjustifyable paralegal mumbo jumbo. Go to college, go and learn how to get away with theft and murder, yeah right... Cut out the idealistic manure and get real will you.
Thanks, Alex, for clarifying the distinctions among these three kinds of intellectual property. The record company I work with, tiny though it is, has trademarked its name, SongCrew, and also the name of our upcoming new offshoot, WordCrew, and I consider the protection of intellectual property rights among my most valuable rights as an artist, musician, and writer.
I am currently networking with the Copyright Alliance in America and other groups (in Europe, there's a group called Release The Bats) and I urge all creative people to strongly support efforts to protect our work.
I was so concerned about music piracy that I recently decided to temporarily withhold my new, Upcoming CD from distribution until I felt there were better conditions in place in the world for all creative artists, as well as greater respect for the means by which we earn our livelihood.
Leigh Harrison
www.leighharrison.com
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