
SUMMARY: In order to help assess and ensure the accuracy of the trademark register, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (‘‘USPTO’’) is revising the Trademark Rules of Practice and the Rules of Practice for Filings Pursuant to the Madrid Protocol to allow the USPTO to: Upon request, require any additional specimens, information, exhibits, and affidavits or declarations deemed reasonably necessary to examine a post registration affidavit or declaration of continued use or excusable nonuse in trademark cases, and for a two-year period, conduct a pilot program for the USPTO to assess the accuracy and integrity of the register; and upon request, require more than one specimen in connection with a use-based trademark application, an allegation of use, or an amendment to a registered mark. These revisions aim to ensure the ability to rely on the trademark register as an accurate reflection of marks that are actually in use in the United States for the goods/services identified in the registration, and thereby reduce costs and burdens on the public.
Even without these amendments to the Rules, Trademark Examining Attorneys could, via a Rule 2.61(b) request for information, require an applicant to submit additional specimens of use. See, for example, In re Anderson, Serial No. 76497832 (August 4, 2009) [not precedential]. The amendments make it explicit that the Examining Attorney has that "power." Now we shall see whether there is an increase in the number of requests for additional specimens of use; may we presume that the Examining Attorneys have been urged to make use of this authority?
Text Copyright John L. Welch 2012.
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