393.01 Trademark Law and Unfair Competition
This class offers an introduction to the law of trademark and unfair competition. Whether or not students intend to specialize in trademark law, a basic understanding of its rules will better enable them to advise clients who wish to protect their own marks, as well as those facing claims that they have infringed someone else’s mark. No technical background is needed. Trademarks include brand names and logos, and can also extend to other features that identify the source of a product for its consumers – including colors, packaging, and design – when they meet certain requirements. The course will begin with the requirements for obtaining trademark protection: distinctiveness, use in commerce, special rules for trade dress, and various bars to protection such as genericity and functionality. It will then cover confusion-based trademark infringement, secondary liability, anti-dilution, statutory and common law defenses, false advertising, and cybersquatting. Could a Utah theme park called “Evermore” stop Taylor Swift from calling her album “Evermore”? Did Lil Nas X’s Satan shoes infringe Nike’s trademarks? With the proliferation of craft brews, are we running out of brand names for beer, particularly pun-based “hoptions”? The course will address these and other pressing questions.
Fall 2024
Course Number | Course Credits | Evaluation Method | Instructor | ||
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393.01 |
Course Credits
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Final Exam
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Jennifer Jenkins | ||
Canvas site: https://canvas.duke.edu/courses/41591 |
Course | |
Degree Requirements |
Course Requirements - JD
Course Requirements - JD-LLM-LE
Course Requirements - LLM
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Course Areas of Practice |
Course Areas of Practice
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