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75 Stan. L. Rev. 1 (2023)

handle is hein.journals/stflr75 and id is 1 raw text is: 
















ARTICLE


  Trademark Spaces and Trademark Law's

                         Secret Step Zero


                   Mark   A. Lemley  &  Mark   P. McKenna'


Abstract. When  is a design just a design, and when is it a trademark? Over the last several
decades, courts have developed a clear framework for evaluating the distinctiveness of
certain unconventional marks, especially those typically conceived of as trade dress. The
Supreme  Court has drawn  a line between product packaging, on the one hand, and
product design, on the other. Packaging features are treated just like any other potential
trademark  in the sense that we protect them automatically if they are inherently
distinctive, and we require evidence of secondary meaning if they aren't. Product design is
different. Like color, it is incapable of being inherently distinctive and can be protected
only when it has acquired secondary meaning.

There's just one problem with this fundamental rule: It isn't true. Or at least, it isn't the
whole truth. As we show in this Article, sometimes courts and the Trademark Office don't
recognize features like logos as being part of a product's design, and as a result, they ignore
the categorization system and evaluate the claimed features for inherent distinctiveness.
Something similar happens with certain product packaging features, except in reverse.
In other words, courts are engaged in a previously unrecognized step zero before they
classify trade dress features and apply the normal rules of distinctiveness for product
packaging and product configuration. In that largely implicit step, courts and trademark
examiners make  their own judgments about the role of that feature, and particularly
whether they believe consumers are likely to regard those features as trademarks.

While courts and the Trademark Office have been slow to articulate rules for step zero-
or even to acknowledge that it exists-we show in this article that in practice they are

*©  2023 Mark A. Lemley, Mark P. McKenna, and the Stanford Law Review. Mark A. Lemley
  is the William H. Neukom Professor, Stanford Law School and a partner at Durie Tangri
  LLP. Mark P. McKenna  is a Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law, the Faculty Co-
  Director of the UCLA Institute for Technology, Law & Policy, and Of Counsel at Lex
  Lumina  PLLC.  Thanks  to Barton  Beebe, Sarah Burstein, Eric DeRosia, Graeme
  Dinwoodie, Stacey Dogan, Jeanne  Fromer, Deborah  Gerhardt, Rose Hagan,  Laura
  Heymann,  Glynn Lunney, Bill McGeveran, Lisa Ramsey, Alexandra Roberts, Jennifer
  Rothman,  Jeremy  Sheff, Jessica Silbey, Chris Sprigman, Rebecca Tushnet,  and
  participants at the IP Scholars' Conference, the Trademark Scholars Roundtable, and the
  International Trademark Association's 2022 Scholarship Symposium for comments on
  early versions of this project, and to Jennifer Friedmann for research assistance.


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