What Does a Hologram Trademark Signify When the Hologram Isn’t There?–Upper Deck v. Pixels
Pixels is a print-on-demand vendor. Pixels’ users have uploaded various images associated with Michael Jordan sports trading cards. Here’s an example:
If this were a framed original of the trading card, the First Sale doctrine should apply. If it were a counterfeit version of the trading card, it would be an obvious legal violation. But this appears to be a photo of the trading card that’s printed. No reasonable buyer would believe this is the original trading card.
Upper Deck nevertheless seeks to enforce its IP rights in the print, both in the Michael Jordan imagery (it received via a license) and its hologram mark (the black shape in the upper left of the print–see the outline from the trademark registration). I believe the original card has actual holographic imagery in the mark’s location to reinforce the original’s authenticity. (Holograms are harder and more expensive to mimic, so they are routinely used as an anti-counterfeiting or security device). So when the reproduction lacks the holographic component of the mark, what does that signify? To me, it’s a strong signal to consumers that the copy isn’t being presented as authentic. Does that demonstrated lack of authenticity have any relevance to the trademark considerations? Unfortunately, the court doesn’t address that issue. đ
Trademark Dilution
The court says the hologram trademark isn’t sufficiently famous to qualify for dilution protection.
Trademark Infringement
- Mark strength. Even though the hologram mark isn’t famous, it’s a strong mark.
- Proximity of goods. Both offer sports memorabilia.
- Mark similarity. Identical.
- Actual confusion. The court presumes actual confusion from the mark’s identicality, with a bonus gratuitous shoutout to initial interest confusion because why not?
- Marketing channels. Both sell on the Internet.
- Purchaser care. An authentic Michael Jordan trading card depicted in the image above would sell for upwards of $1M. Pixels sells the reprint for $70. Purchasers will note the differences.
- Intent. “the mere existence of [Pixels’] notice-and-takedown policy does not indicate that Pixels has knowledge about the infringing use of the Upper Deck Hologram Mark in particular….Upper Deck has not indicated it attempted to take advantage of Pixelsâ notice-and-takedown procedure to notify Pixelsâ DMCA agent as to Pixelsâ infringing use of the Upper Deck Hologram Mark.” How hard would it have been for Upper Deck to send takedown notices?
- Product line expansion. No evidence.
The court summarizes that 5 factors favor Upper Deck, 2 favor Pixels, and one is neutral. That’s enough to defeat Pixels’ summary judgment motion.
False Advertising
The opinion shifts to Upper Deck’s licensed interests in Michael Jordan’s depiction.
Standing. “a reasonable jury could find that Pixelsâ use of Jordanâs likeness in its own similar products could result in a loss of sales of Upper Deckâs products and threatens Upper Deckâs commercial interests.”
False Advertising. I guess Pixels’ advertising claim is that Pixels has the right to market Michael Jordan trading cards when Upper Deck has the exclusive rights? The court says Upper Deck showed enough to survive summary judgment.
False Association. The false association analysis triggers a new round of Sleekcraft factor review, this time focused on Michael Jordan’s trademarks. The result is even more favorable to Upper Deck, so it again defeats Pixels’ summary judgment motion.
Publicity Rights
Pixels challenged Upper Deck’s exclusive right to the Michael Jordan personality. The court says the evidence provided by Upper Deck survives the summary judgment motion.
First Amendment Defense
A Rogers defense goes nowhere. Upper Deck presented “evidence that Pixels used Jordanâs Marks and/or the Upper Deck Hologram Mark in Pixelsâ products featuring pictures and photographs displaying Jordanâs likeness. The pictures and photographs of Jordan displayed in Pixelsâ products at issue in this action are source-identifying insofar as they contain Jordanâs Marks.”
Section 230
Pixels sought to clean up some of the state law IP and unfair competition law claims per Section 230.
In a footnote, the court acknowledges that Section 230’s IP exception applies to the federal Lanham Act claims but doesn’t apply to state IP claims.
The court summarizes: “while advertising and curating content on websites constitute publishing conduct that can be immunized under Subsection (c)(1), the sale and distribution of physical products does not.” Thus:
Pixels is entitled to Section 230 immunity where Upper Deck seeks to hold it accountable for the advertisement of allegedly infringing goods, or for creating website tools that allow users to search and view allegedly infringing goods based on images uploaded by third parties. However, Pixels is not entitled to Section 230 immunity to Upper Deckâs California state law claims where Upper Deck seeks to hold Pixels accountable for manufacturing and selling the allegedly infringing products listed for sale on its website (e.g., contracting with vendors to manufacture and ship illicit products)
As applied: “Pixels does not create the illicit images of products uploaded and displayed on its site, and Pixelsâ website search engine and content filtering tools do not contribute to the creation of those products.” However, Section 230 doesn’t apply to “Pixelsâ involvement in offline manufacturing or selling physical prints containing infringing images (e.g., hiring and coordinating with print and shipping vendors, facilitating product returns, offering a money-back guarantee).” It seems pretty straightforward that Section 230 wouldn’t apply to offline activities, no?
* * *
This case raises many complex issues. In addition to the hologram mark issue, this case raises questions about the scope of merchandising rights, the permissibility of displaying historical items such as old sports trading cards, print-on-demand manufacturers’ liability for vendor uploads, and more. The court mostly sidesteps all of these legal complexities. Instead, the opinion narrowly focuses on more technical aspects, such as whether the hologram mark’s shape could be infringed even when it’s being accurately displayed in historical context.
The court’s rejection of most of Pixels.com’s summary judgment motion seems to position Upper Deck’s claims for a trial, unless the parties can figure out a settlement beforehand.
Case Citation: The Upper Deck Co. v. Pixels.com LLC, 2026 WL 776227 (S.D. Cal. March 19, 2026). This is an amended version of the opinion issued on March 6. As the court explains in the first footnote, the prior opinion had errors that the court needed to correct.
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