Interesting question: Can someone trademark another person’s name without that person’s consent? The answer to that is usually “no,” but, hey, we would not be the first people to say that we live in interesting times. And if we said that, we would not be infringing on anyone’s rights. That aside, the answer to the first question this week is “yes,” at least when the person is a public figure, and the trademark is viewed as an exercise of free speech critical of that public figure.
Blog Editors
Recent Updates
- Watch: How to Protect Your Business from a Counterparty's Financial Crisis – Speaking of Litigation
- First DOJ DEI False Claims Act Investigation Settlement Fetches $17 Million
- DOJ Creates National Fraud Enforcement Division: What It Means for Fraud Enforcement in America
- State AGs in Action: Health Care Enforcement in 2026 – Speaking of Litigation Video Podcast
- The DOJ’s New Corporate Enforcement Policy: A Familiar but Now Nationally Unified Framework for Voluntary Self-Disclosure