Misleading Environmental Claims – climate neutral and environmentally neutral

Misleading Environmental Claims – climate neutral and environmentally neutral

Climate/environmental neutrality are advertising buzzwords used to express the environmental credentials of a company. They can be found in advertisements as well as on the products themselves. Whether and when such claims are exaggerated and may mislead consumers is currently being clarified by the courts. A status update is therefore in order.

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Brand using environmental slogan – We are climate-neutralising Berlin

Brand using environmental slogan – We are climate-neutralising Berlin

Uniqueness and memorability are the benchmark for environmental slogans. It is not easy to achieve this, but when the environmental slogan works, it communicates in a way that is hard to beat. And if it can do so exclusively, it becomes part of that brand. Stadtwerke Berlin [Municipal Utilities Berlin] believed it was home and dry with its slogan. And rightly so?

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Free for all or just for Munich – OKTOBERFEST

Free for all or just for Munich – OKTOBERFEST

There are 2,054 folk festivals in the world called OKTOBERFEST. The oldest, largest and most famous is, of course, the Oktoberfest in Munich. So it is understandable that the city wanted to trade-mark the name of its own festival within the European Union. However, many other organisers have seen this as a threat to the identical names of their own festivals, leading them to fight the registration of the trade mark for Munich. Have they been successful?

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Protective lifestyle brand? – BACK-2-NATURE

Protective lifestyle brand? – BACK-2-NATURE

Developing a protectable lifestyle brand is not easy. On the one hand, it should convey a clear message that benefits the company. On the other hand, it should be able to be protected as a trade mark. In practice, it is a balancing act! The case below provides some guidance.

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Increasing sales through cultural brands? – NEUSCHWANSTEIN

Increasing sales through cultural brands? – NEUSCHWANSTEIN

A cultural institution may try to position its unique structure as a cultural brand within the framework of cultural marketing. Strong cultural brands attract a lot of attention and engender particularly positive images. Customers, business partners and sponsors can form a quick connection with such brands and images. Is it possible to harness the power of cultural brands for the benefit of a variety of businesses?

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Trademark protection for colours? – OFF-WHITE

Trademark protection for colours? – OFF-WHITE

It is not unusual for a company to develop a trademark that contains references to its product or service. However, in order to be protected, trademarks must not contain an inherently intelligible description of the essential characteristics of those goods or services. So what might these characteristics comprise?

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Healthy Food Brand – GREEN CUISINE

Healthy Food Brand – GREEN CUISINE

Food should ideally be natural, organic and healthy, and the word ‘green’ is often appropriate when referring to such qualities. But can a trademark for healthy food that contains the word ‘green’ be registered?

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Likelihood of confusion of allusive mark? – Hydrovision

Likelihood of confusion of allusive mark? – Hydrovision

Allusive marks are popular. They already contain references to the relevant products and their characteristics. Brand developers therefore like to try to ‘make up’ such marks from descriptive terms. But can this lead to problems? Other companies could always build their brands from the same basic words.

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Internet advertising abroad: infringement – WATERMASTER

Internet advertising abroad: infringement – WATERMASTER

Websites often contain company advertisements and offers that are visible in a number of countries. But what happens if a name is used to advertise a product to which third parties in other Member States of the European Union have superior rights? Could this result in a trademark infringement in the foreign country and lead to legal action in that country? The Court of Justice of the European Union has recently published valuable advice in this respect.

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Descriptive sign as collective mark? – Emmentaler

Descriptive sign as collective mark? – Emmentaler

Everyone knows Emmentaler – the famous, delicious cheese with the cherry-sized holes and the nutty taste. It was even around in the Middle Ages! Could its name ‘Emmentaler’ be protected as a collective trademark for the members of an association?

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