Utah Quietly Killing the Trademark Protection Act [UPDATED]
By Eric Goldman
[See update below]
We’re coming up on the one year anniversary of the Utah Trademark Protection Act, Utah’s effort to kill/tax keyword advertising. It looks like the law may not survive until its first birthday, as the Utah legislature is in the process of amending the act. On Feb. 6, the Utah Senate passed SB 151 and sent it to the Utah House, where it is now pending. A quick perusal of SB 151 indicates that the amendments strike every instance of the term “electronic registration mark” (Utah’s phrase for the new sui generis property right it created in the Trademark Protection Act). As I blogged before, the amendments instead focus on allowing trademark owners to electronically register their trademarks in a Utah database (more on this in a moment).
Thus, it looks like the Utah legislature will eliminate all of the new substantive provisions added in the Utah Trademark Protection Act–in other words, a complete 180. On the one hand, I applaud the Utah legislature for reaching the only logical conclusion available to it–that the Utah Trademark Protection Act was stupid and untenable, so wiping the slate clean was both the best social policy and the lowest cost option. On the other hand, I remain shocked that Utah residents tolerate legislators who screw up this big and waste valuable resources enacting ill-advised laws only to waste more resources reversing themselves. If a California legislator screwed up like this, he or she would be recalled faster than you can say “Rose Bird” or “Gray Davis.” And I apologize if it’s rude to say this, but I get asked this question a lot–when the legislature whiffs as bad as this, yes, we do think the Utah legislature is a (bad) joke.
As for the new electronic registry, I’m a little confused about what Utah is considering. If the database is simply an e-government initiative to cut down on paper filings and push registrants to make electronic filings, that sounds like a positive development but I’m not sure why it would require legislative authorization. But there is an intimation that this will generate new incremental revenues from trademark owners who seemingly will value listing in Utah’s electronic database. The fiscal report indicates that the law should generate $50,000 of revenues, enough to compensate for $50,000 of database development costs. Perhaps Utah is planning to get into the worthless-registry business, an industry well-known to all trademark owners. After a trademark registers, the owner gets a blizzard of official-looking letters from companies offering to list the trademark in a proprietary but worthless registry. What better way to scare some cash out of unsophisticated trademark owners than an official solicitation on Utah state letterhead?
Even when the Utah Trademark Protection Act has been fully gutted and eliminated as a threat to the keyword advertising industry, I guarantee that the war is hardly over. Future state legislators are going to find regulating online advertising irresistible, and each of these legislative initiatives poses grave risks to our information economy. As a community, we need to undertake the Sisyphean effort of continuously monitoring our legislators and educating them about the harm they can do with misguided regulatory intervention.
UPDATE: Hold the phone! Perhaps this is not surprising, but the Utah legislature is doing more screwy stuff. When the dust clears, I’ll post a new blog post trying to make sense of the madness.
UPDATE 2: It appears that Utah passed the law in the form I blogged about. See here and here. This presumably sends the bill to the governor for signature. I’ll blog more about the last 24 hours shortly.