Friday

Green Trademark Applications Reach Record High ::.


Quick to spot a growing trend, marketers registered a record 300,000 green trademarks with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office in 2007, besting the previous record set in the heady days of the internet boom, according to a new report from Deschert, a law firm.

Trendy isn't such a good thing in the trademark business, however - many companies encountered "green gridlock" when they attempted to file identical or too-similar marks, the report notes:

Clearly, it’s not easy being green - since a trademark by definition is a distinctive term that tells consumers that a product or service comes from a single source, many of these me-too filings will either not merit legal protection, or will be very weak trademarks.

The word "green" figured in the most proposed trademarks, clocking in at 2400 applications - double the number from the previous year. (Note: if your company has its eye on "Go Green," better reconsider: the phrase appeared in 100 filings in 2007 alone.)

Runners-up included:

  • "Clean": 900 applications, up from 800 in 2006
  • "Earth": 900, up from from 550 in 2006
  • "Eco": 900 applications, more than doubling in number from 2006
  • "Organic": 700 applications, up 57% over 2006
  • "Environment": 450 applications, up from 325 in 2006
  • "Friendly": 180 applications, up 88% over 2006

Download Deschert's Trends in Trademarks 2008 here (PDF).

via Sustainable Media

cradle-to-cradle ::.

CRADLE-TO-CRADLE
A phrase invented by Walter R. Stahel in the 1970s and popularized by William McDonough and Michael Braungart in their 2002 book of the same name. This framework seeks to create production techniques that are not just efficient but are essentially waste free. In cradle-to-cradle production all material inputs and outputs are seen either as technical or biological nutrients. Technical nutrients can be recycled or reused with no loss of quality and biological nutrients composted or consumed. By contrast cradle to grave refers to a company taking responsibility for the disposal of goods it has produced, but not necessarily putting products’ constituent components back into service.


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