64 THE GAME PRODUCTION HANDBOOK, 2/E
trademark that distinguishes it from other colas. Trademarks are governed by
Federal laws.
Trademark rights prevent other people from using a similar mark, but the
rights do not prevent others from making similar goods and selling them under a
different trademark. Thus, at the grocery store, there is a wide variety of orange
juice from which to choose, but it is all identified by different trademarks.
Trademarks must be distinctive so that they are truly capable of distinguish-
ing themselves from other similar goods. Some trademarks are stronger than oth-
ers and, therefore, more enforceable. The strengths of a trademark are judged
by a range of terms from weakest to strongest: generic, descriptive, suggestive,
arbitrary, and fanciful. Generic marks are weak and nondistinctive because they
use a common term that describes the actual item, such as “Coffee” or “Game.”
Generic marks are not protectable as trademarks.
Descriptive marks describe the function or intended purpose of the good,
such as “low fat” for foods that are low in fat. Again, these marks are not pro-
tected by trademark law, unless through extensive sales and marketing the marks
become closely identified with a particular good or service and acquire a second-
ary meaning, such as “Holiday Inn.”
Suggestive marks do not describe the good directly, but rather require some
thought as to how the term applies to the good. Suggestive marks are considered
distinguishing and are protected as marks. For example, “Primsacolor™” colored
pencils and “Memorex™” tape recorders. The trademarks suggest the function
of the good without describing the actual good.
Arbitrary marks are common words, symbols, and devices that have no re-
lation to the good they are distinguishing. Apple™ computers is a well-known
example. These marks are inherently distinctive and do not need to acquire a
secondary meaning when used as an arbitrary mark.
Fanciful marks are created solely for the purpose of acting as a trademark.
These are the strongest type of trademark and easily enforceable; examples in-
clude “Kodak™” and “Xerox™.”
Trademarks must be registered with the United States Patent and Trademark
Office (USPTO). Before registering, you may want to hire a company to do a full
trademark search to make sure that the mark is available. After you have submit-
ted the application, the office will determine whether the mark is unique and
register it if so.
Trade Secrets
Trade secrets are information that a company keeps secret and which give them
a competitive edge. Trade secrets cost money to develop and bring economic
value to the company that owns them. Trade secrets are governed by state laws,
and protection exists only when the information is kept confidential and cannot
be lawfully or independently obtained by other people. Examples of trade secrets