Insights

Canada Moves Ahead with Fluid Marks

November 5, 2018
By Janice Bereskin and Jonathan Burkinshaw

Major amendments to Canada’s Trademarks Act are set to broaden the ability of brand owners to protect fluid marks, but will also introduce new obstacles to slogans, which are currently more easily registered. While posing unique challenges, fluid marks also present unique opportunities.

To connect with consumers in the internet age, brand owners have turned to dynamic and attention-grabbing marketing strategies, including trademarks that are ‘fluid’ and change over time. However, these non-traditional approaches are often at odds with the principles of Canadian trademark law.

Brand owners should consult their IP counsel about the effect of these and related issues, as well as recent practice and upcoming legislative changes in Canada. The Trademarks Office has, without announcement, begun accepting moving image marks. In addition, when major amendments to the Trademarks Act come into force in 2019, the office will formally recognise the registrability of moving image marks and broaden the ability of brand owners to protect fluid marks, but will simultaneously introduce new obstacles to the protection of marks such as slogans, which are currently more easily registered.

Fluid marks

Fluid marks are trademarks that change over time. As a marketing strategy, the use of fluid marks involves the creation and use of a variety of different variations of a mark. The best-known example today is probably the ‘Google Doodle’ – variations of the Google mark on the homepage, which vary from mere ornamentation of the traditional typeface to elaborate user interaction.

It has long been a key principle of Canadian trademark law that the best way to build a strong brand is to use it consistently and statically over time, which allows consumers to become familiar with it as a source identifier. Over the years, Canadian courts have warned that deviations from the original mark are objectionable, dangerous and akin to playing with fire. A significant risk is cancellation for non-use of the original registered mark.

In Canada, after the third anniversary of its issuance, a trademark registration can be summarily cancelled for non-use if the registered owner cannot show that the mark has been used in the country during the three years preceding commencement of the cancellation action. Determining whether a mark as used is close enough to the mark as registered, such that use of the modified mark will sustain the registration, requires case-by-case analysis. While minor updates and tweaks that are unimportant to the mark’s overall commercial impression are unlikely to result in cancellation, even relatively modest amendments can pose problems (eg, the addition of a descriptive word or the omission of a design element).

Accordingly, before adopting a fluid mark strategy, brand owners should consult with counsel to determine whether the existing registrations will be maintained by use of the modified marks and how best to protect their fluid marks. The best way to maintain a registered mark is to continue to use it as registered with all registered goods and services, concurrently with the variations.

The strength of the mark should also be considered before launching a fluid branding initiative. Presenting multiple versions of a weak mark could dilute the mark or render it generic. If the mark is not already strong, frequently changing it makes it more difficult to build consumer recognition.

A multifaceted approach is required for a successful fluid branding initiative. In addition to continuing to use the mark as registered and, where practical, registering the modified versions, several other trademark protection strategies are available. In many cases, it is possible to register the ‘core’ of the mark’s identity. Consideration should also be given to registering a series of marks which, while not encompassing every variation of the mark, may be representative of the nature and scope of the various iterations. The registration of three or four representative variations of the mark could effectively stake a claim for a range of variations. In addition to these strategies, brand owners should remember that common law rights in a mark can be acquired through use, and that appropriate marking and legends can assist in ensuring that modified marks function as source identifiers. In addition, brand owners and their counsel should discuss possible protection under the copyright, industrial design and patent regimes.

Major amendments to Canadian trademark legislation in 2014 are expected to come into force in 2019. These amendments will expand brand owners’ options for protecting fluid marks. The definition of a ‘trademark’ will be broadened from referencing marks used for distinguishing goods and services to signs or combinations of signs used for or proposed to be used for distinguishing goods and services. The term ‘sign’ will further be defined to include “a word, a personal name, a design, a letter, a numeral, a colour, a figurative element, a three-dimensional shape, a hologram, a moving image, a mode of packaging goods, a sound, a scent, a taste, a texture and the positioning of a sign”. Where colour forms the core of a brand’s identity, registration of a mark consisting only of a colour can be sought under the new legislation. The ability to register “the positioning of a sign” will also help to protect fluid marks that feature varying elements in consistent arrangements.

Moving image marks

The upcoming amendments will also specifically permit the registration of fluid marks that are in motion. Moving image marks have long been considered unregistrable, but the expanded definition of ‘trademark’ specifically references a sign that is “a moving image”.

Historically, the Trademarks Office objected to the registration of moving image marks on the basis that an application for such a mark was, in fact, an application for a multiplicity of marks. While many Canadian practitioners were of the view that the office could not recognise the registrability of moving image marks without legislative amendment, it has begun to accept such marks in advance of the implementation of the amendments expected in 2019. The office did not formally announce its change of practice and has not issued a practice notice relating to moving image marks, something that it did when it began accepting sound marks in 2012.

One of the best-known moving image marks to have been registered in Canada is the gun barrel sequence found in the opening of all official James Bond films. In addition, United Airlines has registered a moving image mark featuring its ‘Big Metal Bird’ character and Planet Fitness has registered a moving image mark in which a fist emerging from the Planet Fitness logo gives a thumbs-up gesture.

From reviewing the approved applications for these marks and the office’s previous statements about moving image marks, it is apparent that the office has set specific requirements for applications for such marks, including drawings in the nature of freeze frames showing various points of the movement, a statement that the mark is a moving image or motion mark, and a description of the movement sequence. Applicants must also file an electronic representation of the motion mark.

Slogans

Slogans, sometimes referred to as taglines, are short, catchy phrases intended to draw consumer attention to a brand and to the advantages or attributes of the brand owner’s goods or services. Slogans have long been recognised in Canada as being capable of functioning as source identifiers and – subject to certain restrictions – are registrable as trademarks.

Currently, the primary obstacle to registration of a slogan is the issue of whether it is clearly descriptive or deceptively mis-descriptive of a character or quality. Given the function of slogans to draw attention to the advantages or attributes of the associated goods, descriptiveness objections during examination are common. Currently, examination in Canada does not consider the inherent distinctiveness of a mark, apart from its descriptiveness.

Under the new legislation, slogans may face an additional obstacle to registration. Specifically, they may be rejected during examination on the basis that they are not inherently distinctive. The new legislation will require applicants to furnish the Trademarks Office with evidence in specific circumstances to establish that a mark is distinctive as of the application’s filing date.

The office has suggested that laudatory phrases and phrases that merely provide general information about goods or services are not inherently distinctive and are thus unregistrable without filing evidence of distinctiveness. This will presumably affect the registration of many slogans. Slogans may also fall into this category by virtue of being descriptive of the goods or services, but without reaching the ‘clearly descriptive’ threshold that currently applies. Alternatively, the slogan may be descriptive, but not sufficiently descriptive of an intrinsic characteristic or quality of the goods or services as is required to reach that threshold. As a result, such slogans may need to be used before they are registered so that evidence of acquired distinctiveness can be provided to the Trademarks Office.

While posing unique challenges from a trademark perspective, fluid marks, motion marks and slogans present unique opportunities for creative and dynamic engagement with consumers and – especially in view of major changes to Canada’s trademark regime – close collaboration with IP counsel. Now is the time to review trademark portfolios and use in Canada to consider the best way to protect and strengthen brand owners’ fluid and core marks of interest.

 

A version of this article was first published in World Trademark Review issue 75, published by Globe Business Media Group – IP Division. Please go to www.WorldTrademarkReview.com

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