2003

Business Week and Interbrand have released their annual list of the Top Global Brands.  The top ten, and their estimated brand vaule in billions is reproduced below.  The whole list can be accessed here and the article here:

  1. COCA COLA  $70.45b
  2. MICROSOFT    65.27
  3. IBM                  51.77
  4. GE                    42.34
  5. INTEL               31.11
  6. NOKIA              29.44
  7. DISNEY            28.04
  8. McDONALDS    24.70

The Ninth Circuit has issued a decision in the SEX.COM case.  Kremen had registered SEX,COM back when domain naems were free.  Someone named Cohen sent a forged letter to NSI (the .com regsitrar) asking that it transfer control of the domain name.  NSI complied.  One of the facts with which I am not aware (and

My wife and I saw Roxy Music at Radio City last night.  As we were leaving, we overheard an older woman (I mean older than everybody else there, who were all pretty old – I mean Bryan Ferry is 60) talking to a Radio City employee.  She seemed to be saying that she wanted her

Sixth Circuit: Toucan Gold for golf clubs not confusingly similar or dilutive of Toucan Sam for Fruit Loops.  Kelloggs argued, inter alia, that a 1982 animated commercial for Fruit Loops showing Toucan Sam talking to a golf playing bear “indicate[s] that the Toucan Sam marks are related not only to the manufacture of breakfast cereal

A loyal Trademark Blog reader writes in to comment on the Atlanta Braves tissue box cover matter reproted below.  Major League Baseball had written to Ebay and asked them to remove the products which were manufactured from allegedly ‘licensed’ fabric but the items themselves (such as aprons and tissue box covers) were not authorized by