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Does internet use qualify as trademark use? Wilkinson & Grist - Hong Kong 17 Oct 2012 |
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The Trademarks Registry has issued a decision relating to revocation of the trademark WAVERLEY in Class 24 on the grounds of non-use. In the decision the registrar considered whether the online promotion of the owner’s products on its own website and other independent websites where the trademark appeared qualified as genuine use within the meaning of Section 52(2)(a) of the Trademarks Ordinance.
The registrar looked to Paragraph 10-067 of Kerly’s Law of Trademarks and Trade Names (15th edition), which suggests that use of a mark on a website will constitute use in a particular territory only if the website is specifically aimed at and used by consumers in that territory, as supported by the judgment of Jacob J at Paragraph 12 in Euromarket Designs Inc v Peters and Crate & Barrel Ltd ([2001] FSR 20).
The evidence submitted for the internet promotion consisted of four printed pages, all dated after the date of the application for revocation, and one undated printed page from the owner’s website. As the internet promotion had not been carried out within the three years before the date of the application for revocation, this evidence failed to assist the owner. However, even overlooking this, the registrar concluded that the internet promotion did not amount to genuine use of the mark in Hong Kong. It was concluded that the websites referred to were not specifically aimed at and used by consumers in Hong Kong because:
For further information please contact:
Lily Cheung
Wilkinson & Grist
www.wilgrist.com
Email: lilycheung@wilgrist.com
Tel: +852 2524 6011