Patent, trademark, copyright, and design patent each focus on a different person as the fulcrum for evaluating IP infringement. The fact that patent law focuses on an expert audience while trademark looks to a consumer audience explains many of the differences in how patent and trademark cases are decided. Expert audiences are likely to evaluate infringement based on the technical similarity between the plaintiff’s and defendant’s works. Consumers, by contrast, are likely to pay more attention to market substitution and less attention to how things work under the hood.
Understanding the different audiences in IP infringement is critical to understanding how the IP regimes define infringement. The focus on audience has normative as well as descriptive implications. Neither patent law, with its focus on experts and technical similarity, nor trademark law, with its market-based consumer focus, has it entirely correct. Rather, we suggest that as a general matter infringement of an IP right should require both technical similarity and market substitution. Assessing infringement through the expert’s eyes ensures that the law prevents closely related works in the field while allowing later contributions to the field that are sufficiently different. The consumer vantage point ensures that we protect IP owners only when they have been harmed in the marketplace.
IP owners who want to show infringement should have to show both that the defendant’s work is technically similar to their own from the expert’s vantage point and that the defendant’s use causes the plaintiff market harm. Copyright law, which does look both to experts and to consumers at various points in infringement analysis, is on the right track.The intuition is simple, but it caught this Kat's attention. The choice of the optimal hypothetical audience for interpreting specific IP rights, or evaluating their infringement, is usually left to legislators and courts, which identify the appropriate audience in light of the nature and scope of the relevant right. Thus: (i) trade mark law, which seeks to promote trade, ensure fair competition and protect consumer decision-making, focuses on average consumers; (ii) patent law, which aims to promote scientific and technological innovation, considers a person of ordinary skill in the art, with its expert knowledge, as the appropriate audience; (iii) copyright law, which protects and encourages the creation of artistic works, generally uses (in the US) 'a hybrid test, drawing both on the perspective of the expert and of some non-expert observer (either the consumer or the ordinary person)'; (iv) design law, which aims to ensure fair competition and encourage commercial creativity, asks ordinary observers to evaluate technical similarities.
Performing for the audience! (c) ColKorn1982 |
Fromer and Lemley suggest that the evaluation of similarity, to determine infringement, should be conducted from the vantage points of both experts and consumers. This approach would ensure that 'substitutes to consumers that are not also too similar to experts will not be deemed to be infringement, just as similarities sufficient to satisfy experts that are not also substitutes to consumers will not be deemed to be infringement'. The article explains that these effects would contribute to expanding consumer choice and lowering prices, and would also allow a variety of transformative reuses of creative and inventive works, when no issues of market substitution arise. In particular, similarly to what happens in the context of copyright law, where a hybrid audience presides to the analysis of infringement and to the application of the fair use doctrine, considerations on market substitution in patent law would encourage follow-on improvements and innovative efforts in repurposing technology, while the evaluation of technical similarity in trade mark law would limit the scope of the likelihood of confusion test, allowing the introduction of evidence related to 'the genericity, functionality, descriptiveness, or parodic aspects of the trade mark'.
Sorry - could you say that again, slowly?
ReplyDeleteI suppose the underlying message here is that different types of experts will think in different ways and come to different conclusions on the same questions. Therefore no one individual can be a perfect judge. I suppose the jury system is a recognition of that fact when that option is chosen in preference to professional judges. Perhaps here in the UK we should think about what we have lost in not having jury trials for IP cases.
ReplyDeleteLemley's angle has been and continues to be the expansion of Infringer's Rights.
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