BRIDGING THE GAP: IMPROVING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PROTECTION FOR THE LOOK AND FEEL OF WEBSITES LIZ BROWN * Every company strives for a unique and memorable website. There is a growing threat, however, that this valuable investment in website design will be copied by competitors without effective legal remedy and with potentially devastating consequences. The “look and feel” of a website - the immediate impression that makes a website recognizable, easy to use, and deserving of consumer trust - is not adequately protected by copyright, trademark, or any other intellectual property doctrine. Website look and feel protection falls into a chasm between copyright on one hand and trade dress on the other, neither of which adequately addresses this modern problem. While copyright protects fixed texts, it cannot offer the scope and fluidity of protection needed to capture the look and feel of entire websites. Trade dress falls short because existing law does not adequately address the blend of form and function essential to website protection. This article proposes the adoption of a multi-factor test adapted from trade dress law in order to secure more effective protection for websites and clarify that trade dress is the proper doctrinal home of “look and feel” protection.
INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................311 I. COPYING WEBSITES’ LOOK AND FEEL: A GROWING THREAT TO E-COMMERCE .....................................................................................................................314 A. The Nature of Look and Feel Copying ...................................................314 B. The Economic Impact of Look and Feel Infringement ...........................317 II. USING COPYRIGHT OR TRADE DRESS TO PROTECT WEBSITE LOOK AND FEEL .....................................................................................................................320 A. The Ambiguous Nature of Look and Feel Protection .............................320 B. The Limits of Copyright Law in Protecting Look and Feel ...................323 1. The Copyright Office May Not Register “Look and Feel” Elements ...........................................................................................................324 2. Judicial Use of Copyright Claims In Look and Feel Cases ..............327 *
Assistant Professor of Business Law at Bentley University in Waltham, Massachusetts. The author gratefully acknowledges the assistance generously given by participants in the 2013 American Business Law Journal Invited Scholars Colloquium, who discussed a draft of this paper. The author can be reached at ebrown1@bentley.edu.
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