RE: Reed Elsevier v. LexNotes Update

From: Baker, Brian L. (bbaker@law.udc.edu)
Date: Fri Jun 15 2001 - 08:01:12 PDT


I certainly don't see any confusion. I would be surprised if anyone would
be confused. Lexis' web pages look like Lexis web pages. Yours does not
mimic that style does it?

You could always run a banner ad saying this site is NOT sponsored or
approved by Lexis-Nexis.

Wait them out. This is bad P.R. for them. They really need to back off and
save face.

Brian

Brian L. Baker, JD, MLS
Director of the Law Library & Assistant Professor of Law
UDC David A. Clarke School of Law
bbaker@law.udc.edu www.law.udc.edu
202-274-7354 Fax: 202-274-7311
The secret of education is respecting the pupil.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson

-----Original Message-----
From: T. R. Halvorson [mailto:pastel@btigate.com]
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2001 10:44 AM
To: law-lib@ucdavis.edu
Subject: Reed Elsevier v. LexNotes Update

In correspondence to me from Reed Elsevier's legal counsel dated June 8,
2001, the following:

"Consumers are likely to believe there is an approval or a sponsorship of
the online resource service offered under the term 'LexNotes.' Of course,
the links available from the LexNotes website to the various L-N websites,
including the 'lexisONE' website of L-N, only enhances this appearance of
approval. It is our opinion that a strong case can be made that 'LexNotes'
is likely to lead to confusion of consumers as to source, approval or
sponsorship vis a vis any one of a number of the LEX composite marks of
REPI--that is, a traditional likelihood of confusion finding could be made
with each of these LEX prefix composite marks of REPI and L-N."

The letter cites cases and argues that Lex in various Lexis trademarks is
like Mc in McDonalds and R Us in Toys R Us. Hence the Lex in LexNotes will
confuse consumers into thinking that LexNotes is a Reed Elsevier or Lexis
product.

I hope to be able to visit with some of you at AALL next month in
Minneapolis on whether the Lex in LexNotes is likely to confuse anyone at
your schools, libraries, or firms into thinking that LexNotes is a Reed
Elsevier or Lexis product. I am willing to consider Lexis' claim, but do
not have any evidence of confusion, nor would I have thought that lawyers,
law librarians, paralegals, law schools, and other consumers of online legal
information would be confused.

T. R.



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