This guide will provide a primer for students interested in or studying trademark law. It will also include links and tips for researchers writing about trademark law. Lastly, this guide will provide practical guides and valuable materials for non-lawyers
Taken from the National Consumer Law Center Digital Library.
The Act lists eleven deceptive trade practices, such as bait advertising, and misrepresentations of trade names, the geographical origin of goods, and the standard or quality of goods.4 The only “catch-all” category is one for “conduct which similarly creates a likelihood of confusion or of misunderstanding.”
Taken from § 103. Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act, 1 Consumer Law Sales Practices and Credit Regulation § 103.
The act has been adopted in seven states and used as the basis for new laws in six states with complementary legislation.
Drafted by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws and by it approved and recommended for enactment in all the States at its annual conference meeting in its seventy-fifth year.
Like the Restatements, the Uniform Laws were created to help create statutory cohesiveness between the states. The American Bar Association passed a resolution recommending that each state and the District of Columbia adopt a law providing for the appointment of commissioners to confer with commissioners of other states on the subject of uniformity in legislation on specific subjects. In 1892, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL) was organized, and by 1912, each state had passed such a law. According to the NCCUSL constitution, its object is to "promote uniformity in state law on all subjects where uniformity is desirable and practical."
An act is designated as uniform when it has a reasonable possibility of ultimate enactment in many jurisdictions. The Conference meets once a year and considers drafts of proposed uniform laws. When such a law is approved, the commissioners must try and persuade their state legislatures to adopt it. Adoption by the Conference has no legal effect.
For more, read this article.
The Uniform Law Commission (ULC, also known as the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws), established in 1892, provides states with non-partisan, well-conceived and well-drafted legislation that brings clarity and stability to critical areas of state statutory law.
ULC members must be lawyers, qualified to practice law. They are practicing lawyers, judges, legislators and legislative staff and law professors, who have been appointed by state governments as well as the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands to research, draft and promote enactment of uniform state laws in areas of state law where uniformity is desirable and practical.
ULC is a state-supported organization that represents true value for the states, providing services that most states could not otherwise afford or duplicate. --From the ULC Website.