Regulating Relevancy: Initial Interest Confusion and the Internet
Eric Goldman
Marquette University Law School
eric.goldman@marquette.edu
http://eric_goldman.tripod.com
How Search Engines Work
- Search robots copy web pages
- Every word on every page is indexed into large database
- People search database using keywords
- Keywords encapsulate consumer interests
- Search engine displays search results
- Results often list title, URL, initial text
- Results ordered by proprietary algorithms
- Google uses a combination of link weighting and keywords (location matters)
- Some results based on pay-for-placement
- Some search results may be cut off
Trademarks
- Trademarks are words/symbols that identify/distinguish the source of goods in the marketplace
- Trademark infringement occurs when there is likelihood of consumer confusion
- Each circuit has its own multi-factor test to determine likelihood of confusion
- Sleekcraft in 9th Circuit; Polaroid in 2nd Circuit
- 7th Circuit “digits”: mark similarity; product similarity; area and manner of mark’s use; consumer care; mark strength; actual confusion; and intent to palm-off (Forum, Schwinn, AHP)
Initial Interest Confusion
- IIC is “the use of another’s trademark in a manner reasonably calculated to capture initial consumer attention, even though no actual sale is finally completed as a result of the confusion” (Brookfield)
- Historically, IIC was analyzed in connection with “purchaser care,” “actual confusion” or “competitive proximity” factors in multi-factor likelihood of confusion test
- Starting with Brookfield, some courts treat IIC as a bypass to the multi-factor test
Brookfield v. West Coast
- Video rental store launches website at “moviebuff.com” and uses “moviebuff” in metatags
- High-end entertainment publisher has senior TM rights in “moviebuff”
- Parties have some competitive proximity
- Some searchers might accept defendant’s database instead of continuing to seek plaintiff’s
- Using standard multi-factor test, court concludes the domain name infringes
Brookfield and Metatags
- West Coast used “moviebuff” in metatags
- Metatags are in hidden portions of web page
- Historically, some search engines gave extra relevancy credit to metatags
- Court says standard multi-factor test doesn’t apply to metatag analysis
- The billboard analogy
- Metatags created initial interest confusion
- Misappropriation of search engine traffic because of goodwill association
- But West Coast can say “Why pay for MovieBuff when you can get the same thing here for FREE?”
Post-Brookfield Abuses
- Website criticizing/parodying newspaper (OBH)
- Momentary confusion trumps disclaimer and negates parody defense
- Website criticizing tax negotiator (JK Harris)
- No fair use when website tried to improve ranking in relevancy algorithms
- Website listing dealers of used equipment (Caterpillar v. TeleScan)
- Website marketing travel services (hotels, airfare) to conference attendees (Key3Media)
Why IIC Doesn’t Work
- Doctrine lacks a test or good definition
- Possibility v. likelihood of confusion
- Every word on a web page acts as marketing
- It’s not just about metatags or domain names
- Questionable assumptions about search behavior
- Consumers searching on TM expect to find only TM owner
- Consumers expect perfect relevancy in search results
- Hitting the back button is a “harm”
- Users reviewing search results are confused about what’s at the destination
- Consumers stop their searches mid-stream
- Users guess at domain names
- Metatags make a difference in relevancy algorithms
- Search engines don’t change their relevancy algorithms
- Consumers tolerate search engines with irrelevant results
- Permits TM owner to “own” a word
What Should We Do?
- Eliminate IIC as a standalone way to establish likelihood of confusion
- Consider the totality of circumstances to assess likelihood of confusion
- Don’t allow possibility of confusion to suffice
- Go back to using IIC as non-dispositive support for specific factors of multi-factor likelihood of confusion test
- Should apply only when marketer is trying to arbitrage switching costs
- Rely on search engines to continue improving relevancy algorithms