Puma Files Opposition to Block Nike’s “Generic” Footware Trademark
Puma is not easing up on its quest to block Nike from gaining a
trademark registration for the word “footware” for use on
sneaker-specific software products and services. On the heels of waging
an early-stage challenge to the trademark application that Nike filed in
March 2019, which saw Puma send a “letter of protest” to the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”), arguing that that “footware” is a
“descriptive” term, and thus, not eligible for registration, the German
multinational footwear brand has initiated opposition proceedings in
connection with Nike’s application, asserting that Nike’s potential
registration should be blocked.
In its June 16 opposition filing,
as first reported by Law360, Puma argues – again – that “footware” is a
“merely descriptive” term for technology-driven footwear designs and
should not be registered by any company, especially the $125 billion
giant that is Nike. According to Puma, the Beaverton, Oregon-based
sportswear titan’s “footware” trademark “is phonetically equivalent to
and a misspelling of the word ‘footwear,’” making it “a generic term for
products sold in commerce, namely, footwear,” and not an indicator of a
particular source of goods/service, which is precisely the purpose of a
trademark.
(It is worth noting that Nike does not list footwear
as a class of goods in its application; instead, it is claiming rights
in classes 9, such as “computer hardware modules for receiving,
processing, and transmitting data in Internet of things electronic
devices;” 38, including, “telecommunications services, namely,
transmission of data by means of telecommunications networks, wireless
communications networks and the Internet;” and 42, “application service
provider featuring application programming interface software for
integration of third-party applications to allow an interactive user
experience.”).
Just in case that such alleged genericness is not
enough to make Nike’s mark ineligible for registration, Puma asserts in
its filing with the USPTO’s Trademark Trial and Appeal Board that Nike
is far from the only party in the business of selling products that
“combine footwear, hardware and/or software technologies.” In fact, Puma
claims that it started “manufacturing and selling footwear
incorporating computer technology at least as early as 1986,” while
other companies, such as Under Armour, Altra, and Samsung, are similarly
offering up tech-centric footwear products.
Such a prevalence of
rival tech-centric footwear products likely mean that “consumers are
accustomed to seeing and purchasing products that combine products and
technology, including products pairing software and/or hardware
technologies with footwear,” and as a result, understand that the word
“footware” is used to generally “describe software combined with foot
products, including footwear,” and not to pin-point the products of a
single manufacturer.
“Just as consumers understand that spyware
describes software combined with spying,” per Puma, “they will also
understand that ‘footware’ describes software combined with foot
products, including footwear.”
Herzogenaurach,
Germany-headquartered Puma goes on to assert that “to the extent Nike
has commenced use of [the ‘footware’] mark, such use is recent and
minimal in length,” and as such, “could not support a claim of acquired
distinctiveness” (i.e., that consumers have come to associate the mark
with a single source as a result of consistent use, marketing, sales
success, etc.), which might otherwise enable the sportswear giant to
claim rights in the mark despite the alleged lack of inherent
distinctiveness.
Ultimately, Puma argues that if Nike is granted a
registration for the “footware” mark, “it would receive exclusive
rights over a term that is descriptive and prevent competitors,
including [Puma], from using such a descriptive term in the
marketplace,” and requests that Trademark Trial and Appeal Board sustain
its opposition and refuse registration for Nike’s mark.
Beyond
its pending application for “footware” – which was met with a single
Office Action (in which the USPTO asked Nike to “explain whether the
wording in the mark ‘Footware’ has any significance in the software,
hardware, or telecommunications trade or industry or as applied to
[Nike’s] goods and/or services, or if such wording is a “term of art”
within [Nike’s] industry”) – before proceeding to the opposition stage,
Nike is also seeking trademark registrations for “SNKRS.” Counsel for
Nike filed four trademark applications for registration with the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”) early this year in connection with
its “SNKRS” venture.
In two of the applications, Nike is seeking
federal trademark registrations (and the benefits that come along with
them) for “SNKRS” for use on: (1) clothing and footwear; (2) an online
marketplace featuring footwear and clothing; (3) services of “providing
information, news and commentary in the field of fashion, entertainment,
sneakers, popular culture and sports;” (4) and the service of
“providing a website that gives users the ability to review various
print, photographic, graphic image, and audio and video content.” The
other two applications center on the sportswear giant’s use of “SNKRS”
in conjunction with its swoosh logo, for which Nike claims uses in the
same four classes of goods and services.
After filing the four
trademark applications in late January, Nike has (unsurprisingly)
received preliminary pushback across the board from the USPTO’s
examining attorney.
-
Previous:
-
Next: