FB pixel

FaceTec prevails in ‘Zoom’ trademark case

 

passive biometric liveness

The EU General Court has ruled that FaceTec’s ‘Zoom’ trademark for face biometric liveness detection software does not infringe upon any of Japan-based audio equipment manufacturer Zoom KK’s existing marks, reports World IP Review.

The decision was made by the second chamber of the General Court on June 30, upholding a 2020 decision by the European Intellectual Property Office’s (EUIPO).

According to the EU court, Zoom KK has failed to demonstrate a likelihood of confusion between the two marks, regardless of both being registered under Class 9 of the Nice Agreement.

“To acknowledge similarity in all cases in which competing rights cover computer programs or software would clearly exceed the scope of the protection granted by the legislature to the proprietor of a trademark,” the General Court explained.

The court decided on the basis that while both marks refer to software, they are related to different goods: a sound recording solution and a biometric presentation attack detection (PAD) one, respectively.

For context, FaceTec had first applied for its ‘Zoom’ mark with the EUIPO in October 2016, describing the tool as a “security software that allows users to secure and access their mobile devices through multi-dimensional facial recognition identification.”

Zoom KK then filed a lawsuit on the basis that the FaceTec application infringed on its EU wordmark ‘Zoom,’ which the company first registered in 1999 under classes 9 and 15.

Both the EUIPO’s opposition division and the Board of Appeals dismissed Zoom KK’s opposition in the course of the last few years, leading it to appeal to the General Court.

The latter admitted that from a visual, phonetic, and conceptual perspective (excepting the font), the marks are “practically identical.”

However, since the distinctiveness of the ‘Zoom’ mark is lower than average, the court concluded, FaceTec’s mark is not likely to cause confusion.

“A multitude of software or programs with radically different functions can be found in the same stores, whether physical or virtual, without consumers automatically believing that they have the same origin,” the court clarified.

FaceTec recently reached a pair of deals to provide its Zoom (sometimes written ‘ZoOm’) biometric spoof detection technology to Scytáles and Onfido.

Article Topics

 |   |   |   |   | 

Latest Biometrics News

 

Japanese govtech startup raises 600 million yen (US$4M) in funding

A release from the Tokyo-based digital ID firm Cross ID says it has raised a total of approximately 600 million…

 

Biometric passports in Google Wallet take (domestic) flight in US

Google Wallet’s feature for digitizing U.S. biometric passports has graduated to a production launch, enabling domestic travel within the country…

 

Challenges remain in effective digital ID management for public benefits, report says

The methods state agencies employ for identity proofing and authentication in online public benefits applications play a crucial role in…

 

Dentity plans decentralized digital ID scale-up with Trinsic platform acquisition

California-based self-sovereign identity provider Dentity is taking over a decentralized ID platform from Trinsic to more quickly scale its consumer-centric…

 

Cluj Airport chooses SITA biometrics to power sustainable travel operations

Romania’s second busiest airport, the Cluj Avram Iancu International Airport, has entered into a collaboration with airport biometrics provider SITA…

 

Birth registration progresses globally but big gaps remain in Sub Saharan Africa: UNICEF

About 8 in 10 children globally below the age of five have had a birth registration around the world in…

Comments

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Most Viewed This Week

Featured Company

Biometrics Insight, Opinion

Digital ID In-Depth

Biometrics White Papers

Biometrics Events