I want to build a facebook application that acts as a NFL football pool. Am I infringing trademarks by using team names?
If my interface simply has the names of NFL teams, am I infringing on NFL trademarks and copyrights? This application is for profit, but NOT through the selling of merchandise. Thanks in advance for all insight.
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M$3 Answers
"NFL and the NFL shield design are registered trademarks of the National Football League.The team names, logos and uniform designs are registered trademarks of the teams indicated. All other NFL-related trademarks are trademarks of the National Football League."
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M$Get permission or change the names to something else--else the NFL and individual teams can come after you for trademark infringement, which may involve punitive damages and injunctions compelling you to take the app down, or possibly transferring it to the NFL (if it gets big enough and has any sort of possible financial value).
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M$fb,
You are absolutely correct that "fair use" and "parody" are the two exceptions.
However neither applies to the use of a football pool--the app is not being used for its description, but to directly use the trademarks and entice third parties to play. Similarly, there is no parody here but the use of the real trademark--there are no "Miami Manatees" but the "Miami Dolphins".
I appreciate your response. I just wanted to throw this out there, as what ml962 said, there are limitations. According to Harvard Law's website:
Defendants in a trademark infringement or dilution claim can assert basically two types of affirmative defense: fair use or parody. Fair use occurs when a descriptive mark is used in good faith for its primary, rather than secondary, meaning, and no consumer confusion is likely to result. So, for example, a cereal manufacturer may be able to describe its cereal as consisting of "all bran," without infringing upon Kelloggs' rights in the mark "All Bran." Such a use is purely descriptive, and does not invoke the secondary meaning of the mark. Similarly, in one case, a court held that the defendant's use of "fish fry" to describe a batter coating for fish was fair use and did not infringe upon the plaintiff's mark "Fish-Fri." Zatarain's, Inc. v. Oak Grove Smokehouse, Inc., 698 F.2d 786 (5th Cir. 1983). Such uses are privileged because they use the terms only in their purely descriptive sense.
Some courts have recognized a somewhat different, but closely-related, fair-use defense, called nominative use. Nominative use occurs when use of a term is necessary for purposes of identifying another producer's product, not the user's own product. For example, in a recent case, the newspaper USA Today ran a telephone poll, asking its readers to vote for their favorite member of the music group New Kids on the Block. The New Kids on the Block sued USA Today for trademark infringement. The court held that the use of the trademark "New Kids on the Block" was a privileged nominative use because: (1) the group was not readily identifiable without using the mark; (2) USA Today used only so much of the mark as reasonably necessary to identify it; and (3) there was no suggestion of endorsement or sponsorship by the group. The basic idea is that use of a trademark is sometimes necessary to identify and talk about another party's products and services. When the above conditions are met, such a use will be privileged. New Kids on the Block v. News America Publishing, Inc., 971 F.2d 302 (9th Cir. 1992).
Finally, certain parodies of trademarks may be permissible if they are not too directly tied to commercial use. The basic idea here is that artistic and editorial parodies of trademarks serve a valuable critical function, and that this critical function is entitled to some degree of First Amendment protection. The courts have adopted different ways of incorporating such First Amendment interests into the analysis. For example, some courts have applied the general "likelihood of confusion" analysis, using the First Amendment as a factor in the analysis. Other courts have expressly balanced First Amendment considerations against the degree of likely confusion. Still other courts have held that the First Amendment effectively trumps trademark law, under certain circumstances. In general, however, the courts appear to be more sympathetic to the extent that parodies are less commercial, and less sympathetic to the extent that parodies involve commercial use of the mark.
Where it does come into play is video games that don't have NFL licensing. Some older games I remember didn't have any NFL logos, they just had generic team names like New York vs. San Francisco and one team would be all blue and the other would be all red.
The point is that you are absolutely fine if you are not going to charge money for this app. You might want to check if you are trying to make a profit (but I don't believe so - bookies don't have to pay licensing fees).
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M$I think you are wrong there. Whether you do it for profit has nothing to do with trademark use. Certain things are fair usage, as you mentioned the reporters reporting on the games. But something like a game or app is probably a violation. However, it might not be if you are just doing a pool, where the users guess who will win. I suspect it would hinge upon how much it is an application or game and how much just a list.