1 00:00:00,120 --> 00:00:03,199 Speaker 1: Steve Jobs had a pension for secrecy and a talent 2 00:00:03,320 --> 00:00:05,960 Speaker 1: for building up the public's interest until he introduced the 3 00:00:06,040 --> 00:00:08,639 Speaker 1: name of a new product. A classic is the two 4 00:00:08,680 --> 00:00:12,600 Speaker 1: thousand seven introduction of what has become Apple's largest business, 5 00:00:14,200 --> 00:00:21,320 Speaker 1: an iPod, a phone, and an Internet communicator, an iPod 6 00:00:22,720 --> 00:00:29,880 Speaker 1: a phone. Are you getting it? These are not three 7 00:00:29,920 --> 00:00:36,000 Speaker 1: separate devices. This is one device, and we are calling 8 00:00:36,040 --> 00:00:41,640 Speaker 1: it iPhone. Apple is still just as obsessed with secrecy, 9 00:00:41,760 --> 00:00:43,839 Speaker 1: but there have been leaks about the next iPhone that 10 00:00:43,880 --> 00:00:47,000 Speaker 1: will launch later this year. A stainless steel and glass body, 11 00:00:47,120 --> 00:00:50,920 Speaker 1: different screen technology, and a three D sensor that recognizes 12 00:00:50,960 --> 00:00:54,440 Speaker 1: your face. What we don't know its name. It's one 13 00:00:54,480 --> 00:00:57,640 Speaker 1: of Apple's most fiercely guarded secrets. It may be called 14 00:00:57,640 --> 00:01:01,800 Speaker 1: the iPhone X to celebrate its tenth anniversary, or iPhone pro, 15 00:01:02,440 --> 00:01:05,880 Speaker 1: but Tim Cook, following Job strategy, doesn't want anyone to 16 00:01:05,959 --> 00:01:09,120 Speaker 1: know for sure until he says that name on stage. 17 00:01:09,760 --> 00:01:13,560 Speaker 1: My guests are Michael Rishard, professor at Villanova University School 18 00:01:13,560 --> 00:01:16,720 Speaker 1: of Law, and Brian Conroy, a commercial and trademarks listitor 19 00:01:17,000 --> 00:01:21,080 Speaker 1: at Rennick's List. Michael, we've heard a lot about Apple 20 00:01:21,120 --> 00:01:24,759 Speaker 1: and it's patent wars, but not so much about trademark. 21 00:01:24,880 --> 00:01:29,920 Speaker 1: Explain the difference between a patent and a trademark. Sure 22 00:01:30,000 --> 00:01:35,360 Speaker 1: of patent is protection that you get on an invention 23 00:01:35,480 --> 00:01:40,319 Speaker 1: you have, and at protection excludes the world from using 24 00:01:41,200 --> 00:01:45,680 Speaker 1: that invention. A trademark, on the other hand, is more 25 00:01:45,720 --> 00:01:50,280 Speaker 1: of a creature of commerce. It's what you call your device, 26 00:01:50,680 --> 00:01:53,080 Speaker 1: or it can be a logo, or it can be 27 00:01:53,160 --> 00:01:57,080 Speaker 1: product packaging. But it's something that is distinctive to your 28 00:01:57,120 --> 00:02:02,120 Speaker 1: product that causes people to reckon knives that it's associated 29 00:02:02,120 --> 00:02:06,080 Speaker 1: with your product and not somebody else's. And Apple has 30 00:02:06,200 --> 00:02:10,280 Speaker 1: used techniques over the years to keep its product name secret. 31 00:02:11,240 --> 00:02:14,480 Speaker 1: Why what is the importance of filing for a trademark 32 00:02:14,560 --> 00:02:20,840 Speaker 1: and keeping it secret until launch? Well, the reason you 33 00:02:20,919 --> 00:02:24,480 Speaker 1: file for a trademark is to lock out other people 34 00:02:24,520 --> 00:02:28,200 Speaker 1: from filing on the same mark, and so that's why 35 00:02:28,360 --> 00:02:31,320 Speaker 1: you do it. The problem is, when you file for 36 00:02:31,360 --> 00:02:34,520 Speaker 1: a mark, the whole point of it typically is to 37 00:02:34,639 --> 00:02:36,920 Speaker 1: let the world know that you're doing it so nobody 38 00:02:36,919 --> 00:02:41,440 Speaker 1: else picks the same mark. However, if you are into 39 00:02:41,480 --> 00:02:45,600 Speaker 1: marketing and keeping your name secret, which Apple is not 40 00:02:45,720 --> 00:02:50,519 Speaker 1: every company is, but Apple is, then it's very difficult 41 00:02:50,600 --> 00:02:53,720 Speaker 1: to file your mark and also keep it secret so 42 00:02:53,760 --> 00:02:57,200 Speaker 1: that you can have the Steve jobs like we now 43 00:02:57,280 --> 00:03:01,120 Speaker 1: have to give you the iPhone reveal at an event 44 00:03:01,680 --> 00:03:06,040 Speaker 1: where everybody can do and awe. Brian, what's the current 45 00:03:06,040 --> 00:03:10,240 Speaker 1: approach used by Google, Amazon and other tech companies that 46 00:03:10,320 --> 00:03:16,880 Speaker 1: exploits a rule in the US Trademark Act. Um, Well, 47 00:03:17,240 --> 00:03:19,840 Speaker 1: it's a it's a rule that's not just in the 48 00:03:19,919 --> 00:03:22,080 Speaker 1: U S Trademark Act. It's a rule that comes from 49 00:03:22,880 --> 00:03:25,919 Speaker 1: a treaty dating back to the eighteen hundreds, and so 50 00:03:26,040 --> 00:03:29,800 Speaker 1: pretty much every country has something similar, and it basically 51 00:03:29,800 --> 00:03:33,959 Speaker 1: allows you to file for a trademark in one of 52 00:03:34,000 --> 00:03:37,520 Speaker 1: the countries that's a signatory to the Convention, and then 53 00:03:37,560 --> 00:03:39,960 Speaker 1: if you apply in another country that's also signed up 54 00:03:39,960 --> 00:03:43,360 Speaker 1: to the Convention, which as I say, most are, including 55 00:03:43,400 --> 00:03:46,440 Speaker 1: the US, then you have what would be a six 56 00:03:46,480 --> 00:03:50,000 Speaker 1: month priority window where your application in the US is 57 00:03:50,040 --> 00:03:53,000 Speaker 1: afforded the same dat of application as the application you 58 00:03:53,120 --> 00:03:56,440 Speaker 1: filed in the first country. So the technique that a 59 00:03:56,440 --> 00:03:58,600 Speaker 1: lot of the big corporations are using is to file 60 00:03:58,680 --> 00:04:02,440 Speaker 1: their first application, which is their priority application, in a 61 00:04:02,520 --> 00:04:07,040 Speaker 1: jurisdiction that doesn't have an online searchable database, so there's 62 00:04:07,080 --> 00:04:10,000 Speaker 1: no way for most people to know that the trademark 63 00:04:10,080 --> 00:04:12,760 Speaker 1: has been filed, and therefore they kind of get to 64 00:04:13,360 --> 00:04:15,440 Speaker 1: have their cake and eat it. They get the priority 65 00:04:15,560 --> 00:04:16,720 Speaker 1: date so that no one else is going to be 66 00:04:16,760 --> 00:04:19,400 Speaker 1: able to jump ahead of them, but they also get 67 00:04:19,400 --> 00:04:21,560 Speaker 1: the secrecy so that nobody knows they've done it, so 68 00:04:21,760 --> 00:04:24,880 Speaker 1: they can apply for their US trademark after they announce 69 00:04:25,040 --> 00:04:27,880 Speaker 1: whatever it's going to be, the iPhone X, but they 70 00:04:27,920 --> 00:04:30,800 Speaker 1: already have a date for filing for that from the 71 00:04:30,839 --> 00:04:34,039 Speaker 1: other country previously. So tell us what you did to 72 00:04:34,240 --> 00:04:40,240 Speaker 1: spoil Tim Cook's surprise names last year. Um, Well, what 73 00:04:40,640 --> 00:04:44,279 Speaker 1: I noticed was a pattern that Apple used. So as 74 00:04:44,279 --> 00:04:46,839 Speaker 1: I said, there there is a number of countries where 75 00:04:46,880 --> 00:04:50,960 Speaker 1: there are no online searchable databases. One of them is Jamaica. 76 00:04:51,440 --> 00:04:54,760 Speaker 1: And I noticed that in two thousands and sixteen two 77 00:04:55,400 --> 00:04:59,560 Speaker 1: two thousand and sixteen, nearly all of Apple's secrets, if 78 00:04:59,600 --> 00:05:01,799 Speaker 1: I could ca of that, trademarks were filed in Jamaica 79 00:05:02,440 --> 00:05:05,279 Speaker 1: as a priority filing date, and then the US application 80 00:05:05,279 --> 00:05:08,600 Speaker 1: followed sometime within the next six months. So I said 81 00:05:08,640 --> 00:05:11,880 Speaker 1: to my boss, I've got a crazy idea. UM, I 82 00:05:11,880 --> 00:05:13,920 Speaker 1: think I can find out the names of the next 83 00:05:13,960 --> 00:05:16,440 Speaker 1: Apple products that are going to be launched at the 84 00:05:16,440 --> 00:05:18,920 Speaker 1: big launch event coming up, and I want to hire 85 00:05:19,360 --> 00:05:21,920 Speaker 1: a local agent in Jamaica to go into the Jamaican 86 00:05:22,520 --> 00:05:26,240 Speaker 1: trademark office and do a local search and see if 87 00:05:26,279 --> 00:05:29,279 Speaker 1: I can find any filings there that suggest what the 88 00:05:29,320 --> 00:05:33,000 Speaker 1: next names are going to be. And you found them, 89 00:05:33,040 --> 00:05:36,480 Speaker 1: I did, yeah, well, well sort of, yeah, I found 90 00:05:36,760 --> 00:05:40,039 Speaker 1: the iPhone seven and iPhone seven plus, which were announced 91 00:05:40,040 --> 00:05:43,000 Speaker 1: at the next event. But then the touch bar and 92 00:05:44,120 --> 00:05:46,480 Speaker 1: some of the other products like EarPods weren't announced for 93 00:05:46,480 --> 00:05:49,440 Speaker 1: another and maybe three or four months after that. But yeah, 94 00:05:49,520 --> 00:05:52,000 Speaker 1: there was There was fifty seven I think trademarks that 95 00:05:52,040 --> 00:05:55,479 Speaker 1: have been filed in Jamaica that that hadn't been announced yet. 96 00:05:55,480 --> 00:05:58,919 Speaker 1: If I could put it like that in thirty seconds, 97 00:05:58,960 --> 00:06:02,040 Speaker 1: and we will continue with with more of this, Michael. 98 00:06:02,400 --> 00:06:05,920 Speaker 1: But why is it so important? These names are not 99 00:06:06,080 --> 00:06:12,560 Speaker 1: exactly surprising names or inventive names. Why the intense secrecy 100 00:06:12,640 --> 00:06:19,960 Speaker 1: around them. Well, Apple likes to keep everything about its 101 00:06:20,000 --> 00:06:25,000 Speaker 1: product launch secret. It likes to keep product details secret, 102 00:06:25,040 --> 00:06:27,440 Speaker 1: and so it's got protected. You know, it's gone after 103 00:06:27,480 --> 00:06:30,880 Speaker 1: people who leaked that data, and so the name is 104 00:06:30,920 --> 00:06:33,440 Speaker 1: also very important, and so I think it's part of 105 00:06:33,440 --> 00:06:36,719 Speaker 1: an overall plan so that even though the iPhone seven 106 00:06:36,960 --> 00:06:41,919 Speaker 1: is not terribly uh secret, uh, you know, surprising that 107 00:06:42,040 --> 00:06:45,279 Speaker 1: other ones might be. And so they really want to 108 00:06:45,360 --> 00:06:50,280 Speaker 1: keep a stream going. We're talking with Michael Risch, professor 109 00:06:50,279 --> 00:06:54,160 Speaker 1: at Villanova University School of Law, and Brian Conroy, commercial 110 00:06:54,160 --> 00:06:58,560 Speaker 1: and trademark solicitor at Rennick Solicitor about Apple's quest to 111 00:06:59,160 --> 00:07:02,800 Speaker 1: have the names of its iPhones and other products secret 112 00:07:02,960 --> 00:07:08,680 Speaker 1: until the reveal comes on stage. Michael, we just heard 113 00:07:08,720 --> 00:07:13,600 Speaker 1: about how um Brian got the information ahead of time 114 00:07:13,640 --> 00:07:17,440 Speaker 1: from the Jamaica Trademark Office, and then the Jamaica Trademark 115 00:07:17,640 --> 00:07:22,200 Speaker 1: Office changed its its rules and and the way it 116 00:07:22,360 --> 00:07:25,360 Speaker 1: did things in order to help to keep things more private. 117 00:07:25,600 --> 00:07:30,280 Speaker 1: But what interest do trademark offices haven't keeping secrecy? Isn't 118 00:07:30,320 --> 00:07:33,440 Speaker 1: the reason they have these databases is for the public 119 00:07:33,520 --> 00:07:37,960 Speaker 1: to be able to review them. Right that It's it's 120 00:07:37,960 --> 00:07:42,680 Speaker 1: a mixed bag. So the political economy here is pretty clear. 121 00:07:42,840 --> 00:07:47,200 Speaker 1: Jamaica is getting these filings, uh, and so it wants 122 00:07:47,240 --> 00:07:49,520 Speaker 1: to keep getting the filings, and therefore it's going to 123 00:07:49,560 --> 00:07:53,680 Speaker 1: do things that helped to keep getting the filings. On 124 00:07:53,720 --> 00:07:57,280 Speaker 1: the other hand, if you clamp down on searches too much, 125 00:07:57,280 --> 00:08:00,880 Speaker 1: then you're basically useless as a as its trademark office. 126 00:08:01,400 --> 00:08:05,960 Speaker 1: That said, the types of searches most trademark applicants do 127 00:08:06,240 --> 00:08:09,720 Speaker 1: are not the types of searches that people are doing 128 00:08:09,720 --> 00:08:11,840 Speaker 1: when they're trying to figure out what Apple is going 129 00:08:11,880 --> 00:08:14,320 Speaker 1: to name its new product. That kind of a search 130 00:08:14,400 --> 00:08:18,120 Speaker 1: is sort of a broad exploratory search. You're looking for 131 00:08:18,160 --> 00:08:22,360 Speaker 1: searches within a certain time period. You're looking for searches 132 00:08:22,640 --> 00:08:27,240 Speaker 1: filed by certain companies, maybe with certain lawyers, but you 133 00:08:27,280 --> 00:08:30,520 Speaker 1: don't because you're looking for shell companies. But you don't 134 00:08:30,520 --> 00:08:33,480 Speaker 1: need any of that. If you're searching a trademark office 135 00:08:33,520 --> 00:08:36,360 Speaker 1: just to see whether you're infringing somebody's trademark, all you 136 00:08:36,400 --> 00:08:38,480 Speaker 1: really need to do is search on the name that 137 00:08:38,520 --> 00:08:41,800 Speaker 1: you're interested in using, and Jamaica allows you to do that. 138 00:08:41,920 --> 00:08:45,240 Speaker 1: If you come up with new widget two point oh, 139 00:08:45,280 --> 00:08:47,440 Speaker 1: you can say to Jamaica, I want to see if 140 00:08:47,440 --> 00:08:51,160 Speaker 1: anybody else's trademarked widget two point oh, and they say, no, 141 00:08:51,160 --> 00:08:55,000 Speaker 1: nobody has, and you can file your trademark. Uh. But 142 00:08:55,160 --> 00:08:57,720 Speaker 1: that doesn't help very much when you're trying to guess 143 00:08:58,640 --> 00:09:02,600 Speaker 1: what Apple is going to name their next product. Unless 144 00:09:02,600 --> 00:09:04,280 Speaker 1: I guess you could ask them, hey, I want a 145 00:09:04,360 --> 00:09:09,280 Speaker 1: trademark iPhone ten? Is anybody trademark that so? So? Brian? 146 00:09:09,640 --> 00:09:13,840 Speaker 1: How is it now very difficult or impossible if it's 147 00:09:13,880 --> 00:09:17,120 Speaker 1: a Jamaican filing to figure out what the next name 148 00:09:17,160 --> 00:09:20,760 Speaker 1: is going to be if it's filed in Jamaica. I 149 00:09:20,800 --> 00:09:25,679 Speaker 1: think the answer is yes, because, as the other guys mentioned, 150 00:09:26,480 --> 00:09:31,080 Speaker 1: unless you speculatively search for iPhone X or for anything 151 00:09:31,120 --> 00:09:33,800 Speaker 1: you think it might be UM, then you're not gonna 152 00:09:33,800 --> 00:09:35,800 Speaker 1: be able to find it. So what I did previously 153 00:09:35,840 --> 00:09:38,400 Speaker 1: was exactly as he said. I did a search for 154 00:09:38,559 --> 00:09:41,200 Speaker 1: all trademarks filed by Apple in the six months prior 155 00:09:41,200 --> 00:09:43,040 Speaker 1: to their launch event, and I got a list of 156 00:09:43,080 --> 00:09:45,240 Speaker 1: them all. And you just can't do that anymore, I 157 00:09:45,240 --> 00:09:47,800 Speaker 1: would say, just on the iPhone thing, they don't always 158 00:09:47,800 --> 00:09:51,440 Speaker 1: register the iPhone name. So they've iPhone seven and seven 159 00:09:51,440 --> 00:09:54,800 Speaker 1: plus registered I think four C and six, but not 160 00:09:54,840 --> 00:09:57,160 Speaker 1: all of them, which they don't need to do because 161 00:09:57,440 --> 00:09:59,320 Speaker 1: once they have iPhone in the bag, the number that 162 00:09:59,360 --> 00:10:01,840 Speaker 1: comes after it isn't that important from a trademark point 163 00:10:01,840 --> 00:10:04,680 Speaker 1: of view. Did they ever go after you? Did anyone 164 00:10:05,400 --> 00:10:08,880 Speaker 1: fin any lawsuit again? You or anything? God, I hope not. 165 00:10:11,520 --> 00:10:13,920 Speaker 1: Well if if, if this is a surprise way of 166 00:10:13,960 --> 00:10:16,800 Speaker 1: telling me I'm being served. No, I just wanted to 167 00:10:16,800 --> 00:10:20,079 Speaker 1: know they don't like leakers. And well it's not a 168 00:10:20,160 --> 00:10:22,199 Speaker 1: leak though everything that I published as a matter of 169 00:10:22,280 --> 00:10:25,079 Speaker 1: public record, you see, there's nothing wrong with us. I mean, 170 00:10:25,760 --> 00:10:28,120 Speaker 1: just because the way the Jamaican office works. I mean, 171 00:10:28,360 --> 00:10:31,480 Speaker 1: if you file an application in the States, everyone will 172 00:10:31,520 --> 00:10:33,240 Speaker 1: be able to see it about four days from now, 173 00:10:33,280 --> 00:10:36,560 Speaker 1: even though you won't get it for possibly months. In Europe, 174 00:10:36,559 --> 00:10:38,959 Speaker 1: it's even quicker. If you file an EU application now, 175 00:10:39,040 --> 00:10:41,320 Speaker 1: in about two hours, anyone will be able to find it, 176 00:10:41,400 --> 00:10:45,240 Speaker 1: so you know it's there at the time. At least 177 00:10:45,240 --> 00:10:47,400 Speaker 1: it wasn't against the rules of the office. So no, no, 178 00:10:47,480 --> 00:10:51,480 Speaker 1: there's been nothing. Okay, So, Michael, you were talking about 179 00:10:51,679 --> 00:10:55,560 Speaker 1: Apple's history of going after leakers. Is there besides this 180 00:10:55,800 --> 00:10:58,320 Speaker 1: reveal that they want to do on stage? And as 181 00:10:58,360 --> 00:11:01,360 Speaker 1: I mentioned, the names that they've come up with, some 182 00:11:01,520 --> 00:11:05,360 Speaker 1: are not really all that inventive in my mind. But 183 00:11:05,800 --> 00:11:08,520 Speaker 1: is there an effect of an early reveal of the 184 00:11:08,640 --> 00:11:15,880 Speaker 1: name on foreign markets? There can be, but only if 185 00:11:15,920 --> 00:11:20,440 Speaker 1: they didn't file um, only if they didn't file for 186 00:11:20,480 --> 00:11:24,760 Speaker 1: the trademark rights, which sometimes you hear about. So some 187 00:11:24,880 --> 00:11:28,880 Speaker 1: foreign markets are register only in the US you have 188 00:11:28,920 --> 00:11:31,680 Speaker 1: to actually have an intent to use or actually be 189 00:11:31,880 --> 00:11:34,520 Speaker 1: using the mark in order to get protection for it. 190 00:11:35,040 --> 00:11:38,040 Speaker 1: But in China, for example, you can register a mark 191 00:11:38,440 --> 00:11:43,240 Speaker 1: whether or not you have any intent to use it, 192 00:11:43,840 --> 00:11:46,280 Speaker 1: and within you have like three years to show whether 193 00:11:46,360 --> 00:11:49,600 Speaker 1: you're using it or not. And so what you find 194 00:11:49,960 --> 00:11:52,880 Speaker 1: is that if people are not careful about registering and 195 00:11:52,960 --> 00:11:56,040 Speaker 1: their name gets out, then somebody else can beat them 196 00:11:56,040 --> 00:12:01,120 Speaker 1: to the punch. Now, for Apple, the the real problem 197 00:12:01,120 --> 00:12:04,760 Speaker 1: would be is if the name leaked out before they 198 00:12:04,840 --> 00:12:09,840 Speaker 1: filed it with some trademark office somewhere, because even China 199 00:12:09,920 --> 00:12:12,360 Speaker 1: is a member of the Paris Convention and we'll give 200 00:12:12,400 --> 00:12:15,439 Speaker 1: you priority to your foreign filing. But if the name 201 00:12:15,520 --> 00:12:19,080 Speaker 1: leaked out even before then, uh, then somebody could rush 202 00:12:19,160 --> 00:12:24,000 Speaker 1: to China and file trademark application and this has been 203 00:12:24,000 --> 00:12:29,240 Speaker 1: known to happen, lock basically lock US companies out. Well, 204 00:12:29,280 --> 00:12:31,800 Speaker 1: I'm going to be very disappointed if it's called iPhone 205 00:12:32,440 --> 00:12:35,160 Speaker 1: X or iPhone pro because those are the names that 206 00:12:35,200 --> 00:12:38,040 Speaker 1: have been have been around. Thank you both so much. 207 00:12:38,120 --> 00:12:41,480 Speaker 1: It's been very interesting. That was Michael Rish she's a 208 00:12:41,520 --> 00:12:45,360 Speaker 1: professor at Villanova University School of Law and Brian Conroy's 209 00:12:45,400 --> 00:12:48,120 Speaker 1: Commercial and trademark solicitor at Rennick Solicitor