Dialog Trademarks News Issue 1, July 2005
A community of interest newsletter for Dialog customers.
In This Issue

TRADEMARKSCAN® - Mexico

Additional Madrid Protocol Data Added to TRADEMARKSCAN - U.S. Federal

What is the Madrid Protocol?

European Trademark Databases Added

English-Language Goods & Service Display in TRADEMARKSCAN

Search Tip

Web-based Training

Call for Contributors


Search Techniques
Search Tip
A unique feature of the TRADEMARKSCAN databases is the Rotated Trademark Index. When searching in the text of a trademark in any of the TRADEMARKSCAN databases, you can search for a string as a whole word or as a suffix with any number of leading characters. Simply search in the Rotated Trademark Index (TR=) and utilize the @?. For example, to search for words that end in MYCIN, you would enter:
? s tr=mycin@?

This search would pick up these marks: AGRI MYCIN, T-MYCIN, BIMYCIN, RAPAMYCIN, and ETRUSCOMYCIN, but would not retrieve MYCINOL or RIBOMYCINE.

You can also search for a string as a whole word or as a suffix with a specified number of leading characters by adding the appropriate number of ?s.

For example,

? s tr=mycin@? ?
retrieves MYCIN as a whole word or as a suffix with up to one leading character.

? s tr=mycin@??
retrieves MYCIN as a whole word or as a suffix with up to two leading characters

? s tr=mycin@???
retrieves MYCIN as a whole word or as a suffix with up to three leading characters

Cathy Surles ,
Knowledge Center


Web-based Training
Trademark Searching
Sign up for Web-based training on searching trademarks at www.dialog.com/webtraining.


Focus on the news you want... Dialog e-Newsletters


Dear Colleague

Mary Kay McDonaldWelcome to the first issue of Dialog Trademarks News. We are very pleased to offer this new resource designed especially for information professionals and knowledge workers who rely on trademarks and trademark-related information. In addition to bringing you product and content news, search tips and other information specific to the Dialog products, we will bring you other items of interest from industry experts and colleagues. Please take special note of the "call for contributors" section. Our goal is to make this newsletter relevant and valuable for you, so please send us your ideas and feedback. We look forward to hearing from you.

Mary Kay McDonald, M.S.M., J.D.
Dialog Knowledge Center


TRADEMARKSCAN - Mexico

Mayan ruinTRADEMARKSCAN - Mexico (File 668) has been added to Dialog. File 668 contains more than 500,000 trademark applications and registrations from 1976 to the present, with more complete information available on published registrations from 1993 forward. Mexican trademarks join the TRADEMARKSCAN - CANADA, TRADEMARKSCAN - U.S. Federal and TRADEMARKSCAN - U.S. State to complete coverage of North American trademarks.


Additional Madrid Protocol Data Added to TRADEMARKSCAN - U.S. Federal

USPTOThe U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is now supplying additional Madrid Protocol records for the international applications that were filed by U.S. trademark owners and forwarded to the International Bureau of the World Property Intellectual Organisation by the USPTO. Approximately 2,000 new Madrid Protocol records—from April 1, 2005, forward—are being added to TRADEMARKSCAN - U.S. Federal (File 226). Previously, File 226 contained Madrid Protocol records, known as series 79, which contained international applications seeking protection in the United States.


What is the Madrid Protocol?

Madrid, EspanaThe Madrid Protocol makes it easy to file for trademark protection in many countries simultaneously. The Protocol—more formally, the Protocol Relating to the Madrid Agreement Concerning the International Registration of Marks—was adopted 15 years ago and went into effect in 1996. The United States became an active member on November 2, 2003, and the European Community became an active member on October 1, 2004. Before the Protocol took effect, U.S. trademark owners with an interest in registering marks on a global scale typically filed individual applications with the trademark office of each country in which protection was sought. Such a practice was costly, time-consuming and cumbersome. Although the Madrid Protocol now makes it easier and more cost-effective for U.S. trademark owners to obtain international trademark registrations, special considerations must be made with regard to searching. Sign up for my free Web training session which addresses special techniques for screening and watching using Madrid Protocol data.

—Ann Candura, Client Services

Register Here
The Madrid Protocol: Taking U.S. Trademark Searching on Dialog to a New Level

European Trademark Databases Added

Map of EuropeDialog’s collection of European trademark databases now totals 22 with the addition of TRADEMARKSCAN - Ireland (File 683), TRADEMARKSCAN - Lithuania (File 685) and TRADEMARKSCAN - Slovak Republic (File 676). File 683 updates weekly and contains more than 124,000 trademark applications and registrations. File 685 updates monthly and includes more than 50,000 applications and registrations. File 676 updates weekly and includes nearly 50,000 applications and registrations.


English-Language Goods & Service Display in TRADEMARKSCAN

ShakespeareMost TRADEMARKSCAN databases include the “Goods & Services” description in both the native language and in English. Format 5 has been modified to display only the English-language text (usually a machine translation) for “Goods & Services.” Researchers in English-speaking countries will find this a handy shortcut for trademark knockout screening.


Call for Contributors

Participate in knowledge sharing with your colleagues interested in trademark-related topics. Share your story suggestions with us at support.dialog.com/enewsletters/contribute/.

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