Useful Links on Trademark Law and the Internet
The following are a list of links that take you outside our web site. We do not have any control over the content of pages you may encounter when you leave our web site, nor does our linking to another site mean that we endorse their services or content. At the time we added these links to our list, we found them to be of value.
- Legal Information Institute. Search under the word "trademark" to see laws that apply to trademarks. You can also go to US Code if you know which title and section you are looking for.
- Thomas Legislative Information on the Internet. You can keep track of current bills and activities of congress through this site.
- United States Patent and Trademark Office. There is a wealth of information here. You can also search for registered trademarks.
- Fed Law. Fedlaw has assembled references of use to people doing Federal legal research.
- Government Databases in Politics and Government A useful list of references.
- Uniform Domain Dispute Resolution Policy. This is the list of rules every Registrar who sells domain names on the Internet and every person who buys domain names on the Internet agrees to abide by.
- The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is an internationally organized, non-profit corporation that has responsibility for Internet Protocol (IP) address space allocation, protocol identifier assignment, generic (gTLD) and country code (ccTLD) Top-Level Domain name system management, and root server system management functions. These services were originally performed under U.S. Government contract by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) and other entities. ICANN now performs the IANA function. As a private-public partnership, ICANN is dedicated to preserving the operational stability of the Internet; to promoting competition; to achieving broad representation of global Internet communities; and to developing policy appropriate to its mission through bottom-up, consensus-based processes.
