UTube v. YouTube: some claims dismissed, others move forward

June 13, 2007

News:  A tubing company in Ohio called Universal Tube & Rollform Equipment Co. — which owns the domain name utube.com — sued YouTube on a host of claims including “reverse confusion” trademark infringement.  Last week, the district court ruled on YouTube’s motion to dismiss the case — which is a pretty standard motion for any defendant to file.  The court ruled in favor of YouTube on several claims, such as trespass to chattel, but allowed the case to proceed forward mostly on the trademark and unfair competition claims.

Eric Goldman has an excellent, detailed analysis on his blog.


UTube (Universal Tube) v. YouTube lawsuit: hey, You pornographer

November 4, 2006

News: Steve Bryant of eWeek has posted a copy of the complaint filed against YouTube by Ohio-based Universal Tube & Rollform Equipment Corp, which claims to have used the “uTube” trademark since 1996 for industrial tubing products.  Universal Tube filed an application to register the “UTUBE” mark in the U.S. Trademark Office only last month.  (I’ve reposted the Complaint here utube_v_youtube.pdf if you have trouble downloading it.)

Analysis:  A couple days ago, I did a preliminary analysis of Universal Tube’s trademark claim here, without having a chance to see the complaint.  Now that I’ve seen the complaint, here is some more reaction.

1.  How to make YouTube sound like a shady character:  I have to hand it to the attorneys for Universal Tube, they know how to write a complaint that is steeped in atmospherics.  They describe YouTube as being a provider of “illegal copyrighted materials and pornography.”  According to the Complaint, “YouTube facilitates the infringement of copyrighted works and the dissemination of illegal pornography through its service.  YouTube condones the public exhibition of lewd and other disgusting videos which depict: [i] A man committing suicide, [ii] Torture fetish, [iii] Tampon fetish, [iv] Pubic hair fetish, [iv] Discussion of corpse defilement, and [v] child pornography.  [links in Complaint omitted.]” Universal Tube complains that, because people now confuse its site (www.utube.com) for YouTube’s site (www.youtube.com), “the public has now come to associate the UTUBE mark with the Defendant and mistakenly believes [Universal Tube] to be the infringer or pornographer when it uses the mark.”  

2.  Actual confusion?:  Universal Tube claims that “hundreds” of people have made and continue to make inquiries to Universal Tube, based on the mistaken impression that it is YouTube.   Two of the inquiries, which are pretty foul-mouthed and profanity-laced, are quoted in the Complaint.  Another inquiry allegedly came from Australian police inquiring about an alleged video with child pornography on YouTube.

In my first post about this case, I doubted whether Universal Tube could prove a likelihood of confusion based on the reverse confusion theory.  I thought that Internet users going to a website for industrial tubing would not somehow believe that the site was a video sharing website run by YouTube.  After all, the industrial tubing site has no videos!!  But I could be wrong on the sophistication of at least some Internet users.  If Universal Tube has the evidence to back up the allegations of “hundreds” of actual inquiries mistaking Universal Tube for YouTube, this could give it a possible leg to stand on.

3.  Ohio law dilution claim?:  Universal Tube also has alleged a trademark dilution claim under Ohio law, apparently under the common law.  I have yet to find an Ohio case that recognizes dilution as a claim under common law, but will look around some more.  Under the federal Lanham Act, only “famous” marks are eligible for dilution claims.  Universal Tube probably concedes (by not raising a federal dilution claim) that it can’t qualify as having a famous mark.


Universal Tube & Rollform Equipment Corp. sues YouTube

November 1, 2006

News:  An Ohio-based company called Universal Tube & Rollform Equipment Corp. today filed a trademark lawsuit against YouTube.  Universal Tube claims to have a huge surge in Internet users to its site (www.utube.com), mushrooming from 1,500 per month to over 2 million, apparently because users are looking for YouTube’s site (www.youtube.com).  (More from KLTV)

Analysis:  This is an odd case.  I haven’t seen the complaint, but, from the Washington Post, it alleges in part:  “Due to the confusion in the minds of consumers, the spillover of nuisance traffic to Plaintiff’s neighboring website at utube.com has destroyed the value of Plaintiff’s trademark and Internet property, repeatedly caused the shutdown of Plaintiff’s Web site, increased Plaintiff’s Internet costs by thousands of dollars a month, and damaged the Plaintiff’s good reputation.”

Based on this description, I’ll assume that Universal Tube’s claim is straight trademark infringement.  And, if that’s the case, the claim seems pretty flimsy.  Here’s why:

1.  Reverse consumer confusion for unrelated goods?:  It will be very difficult for Universal Tubing to establish a likelihood of confusion among consumers.  In the typical trademark lawsuit, the senior trademark holder (i.e., the one who used or registered the mark first) sues a junior trademark holder on the grounds that the junior trademark holder has used the same or similar mark in a way that is likely to confuse consumers to believe goods from the junior trademark holder actually originate from the senior user.  Just think today if some computer company (junior user) started using “Microsoft” on its computer products.  Consumers probably would believe that all “Microsoft” computer products come from the company founded by Bill Gates (senior user).  That would be a classic case of trademark infringement.

Here, however, it seems doubtful that consumers are likely to confuse YouTube for the tubing company in Ohio, Universal Tube, which claims to have used the mark “utube” for its tubing products.  The product/service lines are so different — video service versus industrial tubing products — that it’s hard to imagine anyone confusing either for the other.  Under trademark law, a trademark holder only gets rights to a trademark for the type of goods or services it actually sells, plus a reasonable zone of expansion into related products lines.  For a business to “bridge the gap” from industrial tubing to video online would be pretty extraordinary.

Instead, Universal Tube probably must proceed on a theory of “reverse consumer confusion.”  Under this theory of trademark infringement, consumers are likely to confuse the senior user’s mark (here, that of Universal Tube) for the now more well known junior user’s mark (here, YouTube).  But the problem is that Universal Tube still faces the same problem of showing a likelihood of confusion for pretty unrelated products/services.  Who in their right mind will associate industrial tubing and video?

2.  Reverse initial interest confusion?:  What Universal Tube really appears to be complaining about is the massive amount of hits to its website (www.utube.com) by people who mistakenly believe that the site is YouTube’s site (www.youtube.com).  The surge in hits to utube.com’s website caused the servers to overload and the site to shut down temporarily.  And, even though the site is back up and running, the server’s capacity is taxed with the surge in hits.

It’s unfortunate that Universal Tube is faced with this situation (some businesses, though, might like the mistaken publicity), but it’s not really a trademark problem.  Even under the controversial theory of “initial interest confusion” (i.e., diversion caused by a domain name that is similar or same as someone else’s trademark), Universal Tube’s argument looks like a stretch.  The Sixth Circuit (where the case was brought) does not recognize initial interest confusion as an independent basis for trademark infringement.  The plaintiff still has to prove a likelihood of confusion as to the origin of the goods or services.  But that faces the same problem discussed above.  Moreover, here it’s not even a typical case where some website appears to be diverting users away from the senior trademark holder.  It’s the exact opposite, an alleged senior user is receiving a greater number of visitors to its website based on the popularity of the junior user’s mark.  This might be called “reverse initial interest confusion” – something that I don’t even know has been recognized by a court.  

For a more succinct assessment, read the first “comment” below.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 37 other followers