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By Elinor Mills
Posted on ZDNet News: Mar 30, 2006 2:07:00 AM

A court has ruled that a lawsuit over a company purchasing a rival's trademark as a search keyword should go to trial, in what could be the first case to scrutinize the trademark infringement liability of keyword purchasers.

Edina Realty sued rival real estate company TheMLSonline.com, accusing it of false advertising, trademark infringement and trademark dilution. According to the suit, MLS used "Edina Realty" in search terms purchased on Google and Yahoo, in the text of the MLS ads that appeared on the two search sites, and in hidden links and text on the MLS Web site.

"This case offers the first solid data point (in the U.S.) that buying competitors' trademarks as keywords...could constitute trademark infringement," Eric Goldman, assistant professor of law at Marquette University Law School, wrote on his blog Wednesday.

A ruling issued last week by the U.S. District Court in Minnesota said evidence of actual trademark dilution had not been provided in the case but that the case could go to trial because there were disputes on material facts with regard to whether the use of the trademark was causing confusion among consumers.

"This ruling puts increased pressure on Google's policy not to block competitor keyword ad purchases. Now that Yahoo blocks these purchases, Google effectively stands alone in the industry, so it lacks any cover provided by prevailing industry standards," he wrote. "More importantly, Google's position has just become legally riskier. To the extent that competitors' ad purchases constitute direct trademark infringement, Google may face an elevated risk of being deemed a contributory infringer."

In September, auto insurance provider Geico settled a trademark lawsuit with Google over Google's sale of keywords using Geico's mark to Geico's competitors. Other cases are pending.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 19 Talkback(s)
So are we all guilty
This page will no doubt be searchable by Google. Someone putting in the term "Ford Explorer" into a search has the potential now of getting this page. Are we breaching the trademark by posting? Is ZDN... (Read the rest)
Posted by: rzs9wh Posted on: 04/02/06 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
let the buyer beware? as long as users don't mind using search engines that  wessonjoe | 03/30/06
Are You Joking?  Mags100 | 03/30/06
But in the "bricks and mortar world" ...  brunoNYC | 03/30/06
It's not the same.  Narg | 03/30/06
I don't agree  deepee912 | 03/31/06
I agree AND disagree  zanadaugh | 03/31/06
Who's culpable?  jefmud | 03/30/06
Think About It This Way  thenewa2x | 03/30/06
Woops  thenewa2x | 03/30/06
Same on eBay  thomask112@... | 03/30/06
International Standards?  jsargent | 03/30/06
What if a different technique is used?  Hugh Jass | 03/30/06
Funny, Google already blocks ad keywords  NeverLift | 03/30/06
This will shut down the web.  jsargent | 03/30/06
shut down the web?  andyan@... | 03/31/06
Much too simplified  done@... | 03/31/06
So are we all guilty  rzs9wh | 04/02/06
Lets actually think about the implications..  done@... | 03/31/06
Google's a big lawbreaker, it SEEMS, or ...  Scotius | 03/31/06

What do you think?

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