Ambush Marketing
and the 2010 Vancouver-Whistler Olympic Games:
A Prospective View
1.
Introduction – The Vancouver Perspective
The
Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games
has broadly defined ambush marketing in the following terms:
Only
official sponsors, licensees and government partners of the Olympic Movement in
Canada are allowed to suggest an affiliation or connection with the Olympic
Movement or any Olympic Games. Unfortunately, those exclusive rights can be
infringed by “ambush marketing” – marketing that capitalizes on the
goodwill of the Movement by creating a false, unauthorized association with the
Olympic Movement, Olympic Games or Olympic athletes without making the
financial investment required to secure official sponsorship rights.
There
is no unanimity of view that the practice of ambush marketing is an unfair and
unethical marketing tactic rather than a creative, effective and legal
marketing practice. However, this article will not
examine this question but rather will focus on the anticipated effectiveness of
the legislative effort to protect official corporate sponsors of the Olympic
Games from the threat of ambush marketing. This threat has been described in
stark terms by The Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and
Paralympic Winter Games as follows:
The
Olympic Brand is a key part of VANOC’s sponsorship and licensing programs,
because only official sponsors, licensees and government partners of the
Olympic Movement in Canada are allowed to use the Olympic Brand in Canada. Unauthorized
use of the Olympic Brand threatens to undermine VANOC’s sponsorship and
licensing programs and VANOC’s ability to raise the funds necessary to host and
stage the 2010 Winter Games, because Olympic sponsors and licensees will not
make significant financial investments to use the Olympic Brand if their
competitors and others can do so for free.
This
is important for all Canadians. Revenue from sponsors and licensees is critical
to the successful staging of the 2010 Winter Games, increasing funding for
Canadian athletes, and sport and cultural legacies for all Canadians…
Ambush
marketing can be intentional –a tactic used by unscrupulous businesses to
exploit the goodwill of the Olympic movement – or inadvertent. Either
way, ambush marketing is unfair and unethical because ambush marketing allows
the ambush marketer to benefit from an association with the Olympic Movement
without providing any financial support for the Canadian Olympic Movement, 2010
Winter Games or Canadian Olympic athletes.
Ambush
marketing is a real threat to VANOC’s sponsorship and licensing programs
because it undermines the value of official sponsorship and licensing rights
and impairs VANOC’s ability to attract future sponsorship and licensees. It
also threatens the financial viability of future Olympic Games by impairing the
ability of Games organizers to raise necessary sponsorship and licensing
funding.
VANOC
must protect the Olympic Brand against unauthorized use and ambush marketing as
part of its efforts to stage a well-organized and financially successful 2010
Winter Games. VANOC has contractual obligations to the International Olympic
Committee to protect the Olympic Brand against unauthorized use and to prevent
ambush marketing in Canada.
II.
Methods of Ambush Marketing
Attempts
by competitors of official sponsors to trade on the goodwill of the Olympic
Games by creating an association between the non-sponsor and the Olympic Games
without authorization from the host organization and without payment of any
sponsorship or licensing fees have historically been accomplished by several
different non-sponsor marketing strategies including sponsoring the television broadcast
of the event, sponsoring sub-categories within the event such as a federation,
team or particular athletes, purchasing advertising time on television before,
during and after an event, creating promotions that coincide with the event,
purchasing advertising on billboards in the vicinity of the cite, and handing
out merchandise so that spectators effectively become walking billboards for
the non-sponsored competing brand at an event. These marketing
strategies are usually combined with the use of words or imagery that will
remind consumers of the Olympic Games. For example, prior to the
commencement of the 1994 Winter Olympic Games in Lillehammer, Norway,
television advertisements featuring Visa, an official sponsor, proclaimed that
American Express cards were not accepted in the Olympic Village. In response,
American Express, a non-sponsor, aired its owned television commercials in
which it effectively and truthfully utilized a double entendre stating that “If
you are traveling to Lillehammer, you’ll need a passport, but you don’t need a
Visa”.
The question that arises from this, and indeed other myriad examples of ambush
marketing surrounding the Olympic Games, is whether consumers mistakenly
believed that the non-sponsor, American Express in this case, was in fact a
sponsor of the Olympic Games or otherwise had some connection or affiliation
with the Olympic Games.
III.
Ambush Marketing and Traditional Intellectual Property Remedies in Canada
– Passing Off
Instances
of ambush marketing, unlike activities such as counterfeiting that involve the
unauthorized use of a registered trademark on merchandise, are rarely
actionable or amenable to the traditional intellectual property remedies of
trademark infringement. Ambush marketers do not use the trademarks of third
parties but rather creatively allude to a sporting event and use their own
trademarks to suggest a connection or affiliation with that sporting event.
It is thus not at all surprising that there are so few instances where Courts
have had an opportunity to deal directly with the issue of ambush marketing.
National
Hockey League v. Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd.,infra, is the sole example
where a Canadian Court has addressed the issue.
An
important source of revenue for the National Hockey League and its member clubs
comes from the sale of licenses that allow a licensee to display the league’s
registered trademarks on or in conjunction with the licensees products and to
claim affiliation with the league and its member clubs. The National Hockey
League had awarded one such license to Coca-Cola Ltd. which designated
Coca-Cola Ltd. as an official sponsor of the N.H.L. and allowed it to describe
its Diet Coke product as “the official Soft Drink of the N.H.L.". The
license also included a term that Coca-Cola Ltd. had the right to use the
symbols of the National Hockey League and its member clubs for its promotional
programs in Canada and the United States of America.
The
license did not provide any right for Coca-Cola Ltd. to advertise in Canada
during the broadcast of any National Hockey League games. The broadcast rights
in Canada had been sold to Molson which in turn granted Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd.
the right to be the exclusive advertiser of soft drinks during the broadcast of
all Hockey Night in Canada games.
The
action concerned an advertising campaign by Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd. in the
spring of 1990 called the “Diet Pepsi $4,000,000 Pro Hockey Playoff Pool” and
the promotional material related to that contest. Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd.
advertised the contest on television during the broadcast of the Stanley Cup
playoff series. In order to participate in the contest, bottle cap liners and
specially marked cups included the statement “If [followed by the name of a
city or state that was home to an N.H.L. team] wins in [followed by one of the
numbers 4, 5, 6 or 7] games, you win” followed by a description of prizes that
could be won. Hang tags were placed over the necks on bottles of Pepsi-Cola
Canada Ltd.’s products. The front of the hang tags prominently displayed the
name of the contest. The contest was also widely publicized by other means.
The
National Hockey League alleged that Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd. was guilty of the
tort of passing off on the basis that the contest and particularly the
television commercials were likely to convey to the public a false impression
that the National Hockey League and its member clubs approved, authorized,
endorsed or were in some manner associated with the contest and consequently
Pepsi-Cola’s products. Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd. acknowledged
that the cities and states named on the bottle cap liners and cups were
intended to refer to the N.H.L. teams based in the named locations, that the
words “Pro Hockey Playoff” was a reference to the Stanley Cup playoffs, and
that the numbers were meant to refer to the number of games in the final series
that were required by the named team to win the Stanley Cup.
Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd. conceded that the contest was designed to obtain
commercial advantage from the publicity that its products would receive during
the playoffs but denied that the contest was an attempt to pass off its
products as being in any way approved, authorized, or endorsed by or associated
with the National Hockey League and its member clubs. Rather, the contest was an
aggressive but legitimate marketing campaign.
The
trial judge observed that the more common type of passing off occurs in
circumstances where it is alleged that a defendant has promoted its product or
business in such a way as to create the false impression that his product or
business is in some way approved, authorized or endorsed by the plaintiff or
that there is some business connection between the defendant and the plaintiff.
He concluded that there must be a representation that the defendant’s goods
are connected with the plaintiff in such a way as would lead people to accept
them on the faith of the plaintiff’s reputation. The
question was whether the advertising went beyond that which was legitimate and
represented to the public that the National Hockey League or any of its member
clubs approved, authorized or endorsed the contest and thereby, by implication,
the products of Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd., or that there was some business
connection between the National Hockey League and its member clubs and
Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd.
In
support of the allegation of passing off, the National Hockey League relied, in
the main, on the results of a survey that it had caused to be conducted soon
after the end of the 1990 hockey season on a single day at three shopping malls
all within the Greater Vancouver Regional District.
However, the trial judge found the survey failed to meet the test necessary to
enable the results to be admitted in evidence on the basis that the wrong
universe and sample were selected for the survey. In particular, the universe
and sample selected was inappropriate because it was “consumers of soft drinks
who had seen the ad on television” rather than “Canadians who may have been
exposed to the contest”.
The
trial judge also acknowledged that the tribunal of fact must not only consider
the evidence but also use its own common sense when evaluating the likelihood
of the public being deceived or confused. The trial judge concluded that he
was unable to say that the contest suggested to his mind that the National
Hockey League or its member clubs approved, authorized or endorsed the contest
in any way or that there was some form of business connection between the
National Hockey League, its member clubs and Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd. However,
the trial judge attached little weight to his own common sense because he
acknowledged that his own perception may very well have been influenced by the
trial itself.
It
is without doubt that the admissibility of the survey was key to the success of
the action and that the passing off action failed because the National Hockey
League could not establish, without the admission of the survey, the requisite
elements of the cause of action of passing off.
One
commentator has opined that the case:
does
send a clear message to those wanting to undertake tactics similar to those
used by Pepsi. As Davis notes, the case also demonstrates just how reluctant
the courts can be to find a violation of existing law unless there has been a
clear “trademark and trade name” infringement and this infringement is part of
the overall marketing campaign.
Another
commentator has stated:
NHL
v. Pepsi made it clear that, however the rest of the world chose to handle the
problem of ambush marketing, “pure” ambush marketing such as was involved in
this case-involving no trademark infringement or other legal violations-was an
acceptable practice in Canada.
Considerable
caution should be exercised in concluding that any such messages have been
delivered as to the acceptance of the practice of pure ambush marketing in
Canada.
Rather,
the case should be regarded as a cautionary tale with respect to the critical
importance of properly designed surveys in trademark cases. It would be unwise
to extrapolate from the limited “common sense” observations of the trial judge,
to which he himself gave little weight, that the practice of pure ambush
marketing in Canada will inevitably survive an allegation of passing off in
circumstances where admissible survey evidence could be considered. Indeed,
commentators have relied significantly on surveys which have revealed some
considerable confusion with respect to the public perception of the identity of
the major official sponsors of the Olympic Games and other major sporting
events as evidence of the effectiveness of pure ambush marketing.
IV.
Olympics Specific Legislation – Australia
The
Sydney 2000 Games (Indicia and Images) Protection Act 1996, now repealed, was
enacted to put in place legal protection for official corporate sponsors of the
Sydney 2000 Summer Olympic Games from ambush marketing. The legislation was
designed to protect indicia of the Sydney Games including “Sydney 2000 Games
images" defined as any visual or aural representations that to a
reasonable person, in the circumstances of the presentation, would suggest a
connection with the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games and the Sydney 2000 Paralympic
Games. The unlicensed use of the indicia and images for commercial purposes
applied to goods and services in such a way that to a reasonable person would
suggest that the party was a sponsor or provider of other support for the
Sydney 2000 Olympic Games and the Sydney 2000 Paralympic Games was prohibited.
The authors of Ambush Marketing and the Sydney 2000 Games (Indicia and
Images) Protection Act: A Retrospective have argued that the Act largely failed to
achieve its purpose largely on the basis that “advertising which some
official sponsors might classify as ambush marketing was not prevented”. The authors state:
If
one overall conclusion is to be drawn from the experience of the Sydney 2000
Act, it is that the reality of ambush marketing is such that laws alone may
well prove inadequate for responding to ingenious marketing strategies.…
What
this paper has highlighted, however, is that something in addition to the type
of legal solutions contained in the Sydney 2000 Act must be given serious
consideration and much more discussion. The law as it stands now seems unable
to accommodate the concerns of official corporate sponsors. There is no limit
to human ingenuity. As such, ambush marketing at the margins will arguably
always occur…
The
Sydney 2000 Act, aimed as it was at rectifying those situations of most concern
to official corporate sponsors, did not achieve that which it proponents had
hoped for. As such, it does not stand out as an acceptable alternative for
those charged with organizing future events and raises the question as to
whether more can be done to ensure better protections…
The
opinion of the authors as to the general ineffectiveness of legislation aimed
at curbing pure ambush marketing may well be correct but it must be
acknowledged that the analysis was based upon a dearth of any jurisprudence. Ansett,
an official sponsor of the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games did commence proceedings in
the Federal Court prior to the commencement of the Olympic Games for an
injunction to prevent Qantas from engaging in ambush marketing but the
proceeding was settled after several hearing days without any decision from the
Court. Qantas had run a full page advertisement with the title “Australia Wide
Olympic* Sale” The asterisk referenced a statement in small type that Qantas
was not an Olympic sponsor. The authors opine that if Ansett could not
successfully prosecute an action in these circumstances that it was unlikely
that ambush marketing could be prevented under the Act or any other Act with a
similar objective, stating:
…Given
the results in the Qantas case outlined above, it is arguable that court cases
would not have proven successful. Indeed, in light of the result in the case
against Qantas and the sparse reporting of any other cases, it appears that
unless there is an explicit breach of the Olympic Insignia Act or the defined
expressions sections of the Sydney 2000 Act, it will be difficult to argue that
there has been an infringement or that the advertising is in any sense
unlawful…The Qantas advertisements, for example, did not feature the Olympic
motto, the Olympic symbol, he other Olympic designs or the torch and flame.
Similarly, they did not use any of the Sydney 2000 Games indicia. Arguably
there may have been a breach of Section 12 (1) of the Sydney 2000 Act, which
prohibits the use of Sydney 2000 games images for commercial purposes.
However, as this paper has revealed, it is unlikely that the courts will see
this type of visual representation as a marketing tactic which, to the
reasonable person in the circumstances of the presentation, suggests a
connection with the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games…
Again,
without challenging the authors’ views that legislation aimed at curbing pure
ambush marketing is largely ineffective, it must be accepted that the
conclusions are based broadly on conjecture. One is left to speculate as to
the varied reasons why the legal response of the official sponsors to ambush
marketing activities during the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games was not as aggressive
as the ambush marketing activities themselves.
In
the absence of any meaningful jurisprudence as to the interpretation of The Sydney 2000 Games
(Indicia and Images) Protection Act 1996, the experience of both the Sydney Games as
well as the decision in National Hockey League v. Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd,
infra, offer
limited insight with respect to whether similar legislation will effectively
address the concerns of The Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010
Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games as they pertain to pure ambush marketing.
V.
Olympics Specific Legislation – Canada
In
anticipation of the 2010 Vancouver-Whistler Olympic Games and with the objective
of ensuring the protection of trademarks related to the Olympic Games and
protecting against certain misleading business associations, the government of
Canada has introduced Bill C-47, which is to be known as the Olympic and
Paralympic Marks Act. The Bill was given first reading in the Senate on June 14,
2007. The question which this article
will address is whether this legislative response might effectively achieve the
purpose of ameliorating the concerns expressed by VANOC.
Section
3(1) of Bill C-47 provides that no person shall adopt or use in connection with
a business, as a trade-mark or otherwise, an Olympic or Paralympic mark or a
mark that so nearly resembles an Olympic or Paralympic mark as to be likely to
be mistaken for it. Olympic and Paralympic marks include
the marks that are set out in Schedules 1 and 2 of Bill C-47 and
include the words and phrases in Schedule 1, such as Canadian Olympic
Committee, Canadian Paralympic Committee, Faster, Higher, Stronger,
International Olympic Committee, International Paralympic Committee, Olympia,
Olympiad, Olympian, Olympic, Olympic Games, Olympics, Paralympian, Paralympic,
Paralympic Games, Paralympics, Spirit in Motionand
the words and phrases in Schedule 2 such as Canada 2010, Canada’s Games, COVAN,
Games City, Sea to Sky Games, Vancouver 2010, Vancouver Games, Vancouver
Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, VANOC,
Whistler 2010, and Whistler Games. The marks set out in Column 1 of
Schedule 2 will be considered not to be an Olympic or Paralympic mark after
December 31, 2010.
The
words and expressions used in Bill C-47 shall, unless the context otherwise
requires, have the same meaning as in the Trade-Marks Act.
Section 3 (1) of Bill C-47 is similar to section 9 of the Trade-Marks Act which provides that no
person shall adopt in connection with a business, as a trade-mark or otherwise,
any mark consisting of, or so nearly resembling as to be likely to be mistaken
for an official mark.
The test to
be applied under section 9(1) of the Trade-Marks Act is whether or not the
mark consists of, or so nearly resembles as to be likely to be mistaken for,
the official mark. In other words, is the mark identical to, or almost the
same as, the official mark. In Big Sisters Assn. Of
Ontario v. Big Brothers of Canada, supra, Mr. Justice Gibson
rejected the argument that the test is one of "straight comparison"
but, rather concluded that the test is one of resemblance, stating:
Clearly, the
Defendant's mark is not identical to the marks of BSAO. The issue then is
whether or not the Defendant's mark is almost the same as, or substantially
similar
to any or all of BSAO's marks...
It has been
contended that the words "consists of" are not equivalent to "identical
to" but the Federal Court of Canada held otherwise in Canadian
Council of Professional Engineers v. APA-The Engineered Wood Assn., infra..
Mr.
Justice O'Keefe held that the words "consisting of" in s. 9 of the Trade-Marks
Act are
to be interpreted to mean "identical to"and do not mean "including".
Even in
circumstances where there is a "fairly high degree of resemblance"
between the two marks, that will not be determinative. The section has
historically been strictly construed and it is only the most careless of ambush
marketers that will run afoul of section 3(1) of Bill C-47.
Section 4(1)
of Bill C-47 provides that no person shall, during any period prescribed by
regulation, in association with a trade-mark or other mark, promote or
otherwise direct public attention to their business, wares or services in a
manner that misleads or is likely to mislead the public into believing that
(a) the person’s business, wares or services are approved, authorized or
endorsed by an organizing committee, the Canadian Olympic Committee or the
Canadian Paralympic Committee; or (b) a business association exists between the
person’s business and the Olympic Games, the Paralympic Games, an organizing
Committee, the Canadian Olympic Committee or the Canadian Paralympic Committee.
Section 4(1)
closely mirrors the traditional intellectual property remedy of passing off
that was considered by the Courts in British Columbia in National Hockey
League v. Pepsi-Cola Ltd., supra. In determining whether a person has acted
contrary to subsection (1), the court shall take into account any evidence that
the person has used, in any language, (a) a combination of expressions set out
in Part 1 of Schedule 3; or (b) the combination of an expression set out in
Part I of Schedule 3 with an expression set out in Part 2 of that schedule.
The expressions set out in Schedule 3 to Bill C-47 include Games, 2010,
Twenty-ten, 21st, Twenty-first, XXI, 10th, Tenth, Xth,
and Medals. The expressions set out in Part II
of Schedule III include Winter, Gold, Silver, Bronze, Sponsor, Vancouver, and
Whistler.
Interestingly,
the Bill does not contemplate the absolute prohibition of the use in
advertising of any of these expressions alone and indeed even the combination
of any of the expressions. Rather, the Courts will simply be required to take
such evidence into account in determining whether a person has acted contrary
to section 4 (1). As with the prohibition contained in section 3(1) of Bill
C-47, it is likely that only the most careless of ambush marketers would design
a marketing campaign that would utilize one of the designated combinations of
expressions set out in Schedule 3.
All of the
words and expressions in Schedules 2 and 3 will be repealed as of December 31,
2010.
If a court
finds, on application, that an act has been done contrary to section 3 or 4, it
may make any order that it considers appropriate in the circumstances,
including an order providing for relief by way of injunction and recovery of
damages or profits, for punitive damages, for the publication of a corrective
advertisement and for the destruction, exportation or other disposition (a) of
any offending goods, packages, labels and advertising material; and (b) of any
dies used to apply to those goods, packages, labels or advertising a mark whose
adoption or use is prohibited under section 3. The Act in this
regard mimics the remedies that are available to litigants in traditional
intellectual property cases. No remedy may be awarded in respect
of an act contrary to section 3 or 4 that was committed more than three years
before the commencement of an action under subsection 5(1).
However,
Bill C-47 does include one provision that could be of considerable assistance
in the context of an ambush marketing action commenced under section 4 (1) of
Bill C-47. Section 6 provides that if an interim or interlocutory injunction
is sought in respect of an act that is claimed to be contrary to section 3 or
4, an applicant is not required to prove that it will suffer irreparable harm.
In recent
years, the availability of interim and interlocutory injunctions in
intellectual property infringement cases has been severely circumscribed by the
requirement to demonstrate irreparable harm. It is quite likely that a
traditional passing off action would not be viewed by official sponsors who had
been victims of ambush marketing as a realistic option in the absence of this
provision because of the view that the damage had already been done. This
provision may well facilitate the commencement of actions pursuant to section
4(1).
VI.
Additional Measures Available to Official Sponsors
A variety of
additional measures have been utilized by the International Olympic Committee,
host cities and official sponsors to combat at least some the methods that have
been effectively used by ambush marketers in the past. In 1997, the
International Olympic Committee announced that any city bidding to host the
Olympic Games in the future must purchase all advertising space for use by
official sponsors within the host city for the entire month during which the
Olympic Games are held.
Further,
measures have been undertaken to impose restrictions on awarding tickets to
Olympic events in commercial promotions without authorization and to preventing
the products of competitors of official sponsors from being displayed or
carried by spectators at events. FIFA has been especially aggressive
in pursuing such measures. Fans of the Netherlands at the 2006 FIFA World Cup
were required to disrobe their lleuwenhosen before being allowed to enter the
stadium. The pants had been provided to fans as part of a commercial promotion
and displayed the logo of a brewery that was not the World Cup’s official beer
sponsor.
Australia
enacted the Olympic Arrangements Act prior to the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games.
The Act included provisions that prohibited the sale of any unauthorized
merchandising articles within a specified radius of an event location during
the Olympic Games and also prohibited skywriting or flying banners above event
locations.
Commentators
who argue that the legislative efforts of Australia to prevent ambush marketing
during the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games largely failed to achieve their purpose
concede that these provisions went further than ever before and were arguably
more successful than other host cities in controlling some aspects of ambush
marketing.
VII.
Measures Available to Ambush Marketers to Avoid Lawsuits
Small and
medium businesses cannot afford to pay the license fees that must be paid by official
sponsors. The ingenuity of ambush marketers in protecting themselves from
liability has been noted by virtually all commentators.
In the light
of Bill C-47, ambush marketers may seek to ensure protection from liability by
including in all advertising materials an unambiguous disclaimer stating that
they are not affiliated with or endorsed by the International Olympic
Committee, the Canadian Olympic Committee or the Olympic Committee of the host
city.
In National
Hockey League v. Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd., the trial judge made
only passing reference in reaching his primary conclusion that the claim to
passing off had not been made out to the disclaimer that appeared in both the
television advertisements and on all the printed material associated with the
contest but elaborated on the issue in obiter. The trial judge
acknowledged that the disclaimer that was displayed during the television
commercials left something to be desired because it was displayed for about
seven seconds and was against a background that made it difficult to read.
However, the disclaimer was displayed prominently in bold print on all printed
materials relating to the contest.
The
prominence to be given to a disclaimer must depend on the likelihood of a false
impression being conveyed to the public if there is no disclaimer. There will
undoubtedly be some situations where no disclaimer will be adequate. On the
facts of the case, the trial judge observed that there was only a minimal
likelihood that the television advertisements would create a false impression
in the minds of the public that the National Hockey League endorsed the
products of Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd. He concluded that had a disclaimer been
necessary, it would have been sufficient to dispel any possible misapprehension
having regard to the fact that the disclaimer was produced very clearly on the
printed advertising materials for the contest.
VIII.
Conclusion
It is
difficult to offer any definitive opinion as to whether Bill C-47 has
successfully supplemented existing intellectual property rights given the
dearth of jurisprudence both with respect to the efficacy of applying existing
intellectual property rights in the context of ambush marketing, and with
respect to the use of legislation in Olympic specific contexts. It may be
asserted that Bill C-47 would not be regarded as a significant advance in the
legal strategies available to address the harms allegedly caused by ambush
marketing because its provisions so clearly mirror those of existing intellectual
property rights but for the inclusion of the provision providing that in the
plaintiff need not establish proof of irreparable harm in the context of
applications for interim or interlocutory injunctions brought in actions
pursuant to sections 3 and 4 of Bill C-47. The potential impact of this
provision should not be understated for it is this single provision that may
embolden official sponsors to commence actions against ambush marketers and to
obtain meaningful relief at the outset of a harmful ambush marketing campaign.
By: Nancy
A. Miller
Fogler,
Rubinoff LLP