Becoming a trademark attorney As noted above, U.S.-licensed attorneys need not apply for registration to practice trademark law before the USPTO. If you are a law student interested in becoming a trademark attorney, you may want to consider participating in the USPTO's Law School Clinic Certification Program.
The California Trademark Act covers: (1) trademarks, which are words, names, symbols, or devices or any combination to indicate the source of the goods; (2) service marks, which are words, names, symbols, or devices or any combination to indicate the source of a service that you provide; and (3) trade names, which are ...
Trademarks Online: Applications to file a Trademark or Service Mark registration can be submitted online through the California Secretary of State's bizfile California portal, in person at the Sacramento office, or through the mail.
A bachelor's degree in engineering or a “hard” science, (in contrast to social, psychological, or political “sciences” for example) will qualify Patent Agent candidates to take the Patent Bar Exam, (the same exam taken by Patent Attorneys) although many Patent Agents hold Master or Doctoral degrees.
To register a trademark with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), you will need to fill out and submit a trademark application. You can do this online, through the USPTO Trademark Center, an online trademark filing service, an attorney, or by submitting a paper application.
What Are the Three Requirements for Trademarks? Fanciful. That means the item being trademarked is entirely invented and is not found in a dictionary. Arbitrary. This is a mark that does exist in the dictionary, but how the business uses it doesn't relate to the dictionary's definition. Suggestive.