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Allysia Britton, Author at Weintraub Tobin - Page 35 of 38

Welcome to the Weintraub Resources section. Here, you can find our Blogs, Videos, and Podcasts, in which Weintraub attorneys regularly provide insights and updates on legal developments. You can also find upcoming Weintraub Events, as well as firm and client News.


District Court Rules Twenty-Two Month Delay in Filing Copyright Case Favors Denying Plaintiffs’ Request for Preliminary Injunction

In Jacobs et al v. The Journal Publishing Company et al, 1-21-cv-00690, District Judge Martha Vazquez of the District Court of New Mexico recently held Plaintiffs’ twenty-two-month delay in filing suit rebutted any presumption of irreparable harm for alleged copyright violations, and accordingly denied Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction.

Webinar: Untangling the Top 10 Accommodation and Leave Knots

Navigating and administering leaves of absence in California has never been easy. Employers have to first understand which statutory leaves apply to their workplace, then ensure that they not only have policies in place regarding those leaves but also administer those leaves properly. Often, various leave statutes, reasonable accommodation statutes, and partial wage-replacement statutes overlap in a given situation, making compliance with the law even more difficult.

In a live webinar, Weintraub Tobin’s employment law attorneys, Lizbeth “Beth” West and Ryan Abernethy provided a summary of the complex statutory scheme of leave and accommodation laws under federal and state law and provide some helpful insights and best practices for compliance. They discussed who is eligible and under what circumstances and highlight the particular rights and obligations of both employers and employees.

Ohio State Successfully Registers the Word THE with the Trademark Office

Ohio State University recently made Intellectual Property headlines by managing to procure a trademark registration for the word THE. The registration procured by Ohio State covers t-shirts, caps, and hats. Although the registration covers limited goods and services, that hasn’t stopped people from being outraged by the idea that a person or entity can obtain exclusive rights to use of the most commonly used word in the English language. But is it really that big of a deal? In my humble opinion, it is not.

WT Deals: Diane Lane to Co-Star in Netflix Limited Series ‘A Man in Full’

Weintraub client Diane Lane has been cast in the Netflix limited series “A Man in Full,” based on the Tom Wolfe novel of the same name. Lane will star alongside Jeff Daniels. David E. Kelly will write, executive produce, and serve as showrunner for the series. Weintraub client Tommy Schlamme will direct and executive produce three episodes, and Regina King will direct and executive produce three.

A Brave New World: The NCAA’s New NIL Policy and the Need for Federal Legislation

©2022. Published in Landslide, Vol. 14, No. 4, June/July 2022, by the American Bar Association. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved. This information or any portion thereof may not be copied or disseminated in any form or by any means or stored in an electronic database or retrieval system without the express written consent of the American Bar Association or the copyright holder.

This article was written by Josh Escovedo and Michelle Yegiyants.

The landscape has changed. After decades of the NCAA reaping the benefit of college players, their labor, and their name, image, and likeness (collectively, NIL), the NCAA has changed its policy and allowed players to market their NIL without sacrificing their amateur status. However, the NCAA only made this change after a scathing U.S. Supreme Court ruling in a related matter, where the Court affirmed a decision from a U.S. district court enjoining the NCAA from limiting universities from providing student-athletes with certain education-related benefits.[1] In Justice Kavanaugh’s concurring opinion, he warned the NCAA that it should strongly reconsider its NIL-related policies before such matters are taken before the Court.[2] The Court issued its decision on June 21, 2021. The NCAA responded by changing its policy effective July 1, 2021.[3] 

MSCHF Looks to the 2nd Circuit to Get Out of Trouble with Vans

In May, skater shoe company, Vans, persuaded a district court judge in NY to halt the pre-sale of a pair of shoes called Wavy Baby, the result of a collaboration of rapper Tyga and MSCHF, a Brooklyn-based design studio that was previously sued by Nike over its Satan Shoe collaboration with NasX. The case is Vans, Inc. v. MSCHF Product Studio, Inc. In Vans’ motion for a TRO, the court determined that Vans would likely prevail on its claims that consumers would be confused between the Wavy Baby sneakers and Vans’ Old Skool sneakers because of their “striking visual similarities” and packaging.

Image comparing classic vans sneaker to brand with allegedly similar design

In granting Vans’ request, the court found a likelihood of consumer confusion by analyzing the multifactor Polaroid test (similar to the Sleekcraft test in the 9th Circuit). The Polariod factors are: (1) the strength of the plaintiff’s mark; (2) the degree of similarity between the two marks; (3) the proximity of the products; (4) the likelihood that the owner will bridge the gap; (5) evidence of actual confusion; (6) defendant’s good faith in adopting the mark; (7) the quality of defendant’s product; and (8) the sophistication of the consumers.

In its opposition, MSCHF argued that its product is an expressive work, a parody, entitled to First Amendment protection. In assessing this argument, the court said that “whatever artistic merits of the Wavy Baby shoes, the shoes do not meet the requirements for a successful parody.” The court did not consider the Rogers test.

The Rogers test was adopted by the 2nd Circuit in Rogers v Grimaldi. The Rogers court held that where the defendant’s product is artistic or expressive, the Lanham Act must be interpreted “narrowly in order to avoid suppressing protected speech under the First Amendment.” The two parts of the Rogers test are artistic relevancy and whether the use of the mark is explicitly misleading. As for the first factor, the bar for artistic relevancy is extremely low. As for the second factor, whether the use is explicitly misleading, in most instances an “explicitly misleading use” requires an overt claim or an explicit reference to an association with the third-party mark.

So did the district court make a mistake in not considering the issue in light of Rogers? MSCHF thinks so, and has appealed to the 2nd Circuit. Parties that have filed various amicus briefs in favor of having the 2nd Circuit review the decision include a group of intellectual property law professors, the International Trademark Association and others, all asking the 2nd Circuit to take this opportunity to clarify what qualifies as a protected “expressive” work.

The law professors believe the district court judge erred in dismissing MSCHIF’s First Amendment argument. In their brief they argued that “Shoe designers mock, comment on, and pay homage to each other,” the academics argued. “Those modifications are expressive speech the law should protect.” The amicus brief lays out many examples of custom shoe designs that are treated akin to works of art and contends that sneakers are an important and fertile ground for art, expression, commentary, and parody.

In order for the Rogers test to apply, the work must be an “expressive work” The courts have seen the Rogers test applied to movies, plays, books, songs, video games, paintings, prints, calendars, music, pictures, drawings, engravings, sculptures, greeting cards and even dog toys, despite the fact that some of these items are sold in the commercial marketplace. According to the law professors, the medium of the work does not matter so much as long as the work in question “communicates ideas – and even social messages” – in a manner similar to other expressive media.

The INTA, however, would like the 2nd Circuit to confirm that the Rogers test applies only to traditionally expressive works, not ordinary consumer products like the sneakers at issue. INTA argues that if the allegedly infringing work is not a traditional work of authorship but a utilitarian product (like a dog toy or a sneaker), then the “explicitly misleading” factor under Rogers too strongly shields defendants except in the most blatant of infringements.

Regardless of where one comes out on whether or not the sneakers at issue are expressive works, at a minimum the district court should have engaged in this analysis. The question remains whether the 2nd Circuit will take this opportunity to establish some guidelines on what constitutes an expressive work.