NCAA TO ENFORCE MARCH MADNESS COPYRIGHTS
20 March 2009
NCAA lawyers to send hundreds of
cease-and-desist letters this year
Whilst most of America is getting into the spirit of the
college hoops March Madness betting this week, the legal
eagles at the National Collegiate Athletic Association
(NCAA) are gearing up to enforce the organisation's
trademark and copyright protection, reports the Los
Angeles Times.
The organisation says the
competition triggers a flood of unauthorised use of the
NCAA's trademarks as companies include terms such as
"March Madness" and "Final Four" in advertising to
attract customers. And as the economic situation
deteriorates, the flagrant misuse of the NCAA trademarks
seems to worsen, say lawyers.
The NCAA expects to
send hundreds of cease-and-desist letters this year to
websites, bars, casinos and even major companies that
use its trademarks without permission, Jay Rossello, its
director of legal affairs, told the LA Times.
Doug Masters, a partner at law firm Loeb & Loeb who's an
outside counsel for the NCAA confirms the trend: "The
downward economy has created a spike in unauthorized
activity," he said . "When times are tough, instead of
spending your money to get sales, you try to leverage
off of other people's investments."
The NCAA has
to protect its trademarks to maintain their value.
Letting any business offer an "Elite Eight Special," for
example, hurts the association's ability to get top
dollar from official sponsors, lawyers say.
That
means allowing no posters on doors of casinos inviting
people to March Madness gambling, no Internet ads luring
people to websites where they can buy unauthorized March
Madness gear and no March Madness Web banners trying to
get people to bars or events that aren't NCAA sponsors.
The Internet has made it easier for businesses to
try to profit from the tournament by creating unofficial
bracket pools and smart phone applications. As CBS, the
tournament's official TV network, makes more of the
games available for live viewing online, websites also
can take the feeds without permission to attract
visitors.
In past years, the NCAA has scared
online travel companies into pulling offers for Final
Four trips and blocked online casinos from pitching
March Madness promotions.
This year, the
association waged a successful fight against an adult
website running a bracket-style tournament featuring
porn stars and explicit puns on the trademarked
basketball terms. It also looks closely at ticket
promoters implying that they have a connection to the
NCAA.
One of the latest targets is NASA, the
federal space agency. The NCAA recently asked NASA to
stop advertising Mission Madness, which lets fans vote
on its greatest-ever mission. The promotion featured a
bracket system like that used in the college tournament
as well as basketball icons.
"There was no reason
to use basketballs," Masters said.
An agency
spokeswoman said she knew nothing about any complaints
from the NCAA. Mission Madness remains online.
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