trademark-istock-508118711-timarbaev-
28 January 2019Trademarks

Residents concerned by Oxford University’s latest TM application

A UK political party based in Oxford may ask the city’s council to oppose Oxford University’s bid to register the word ‘Oxford’ as a trademark amid concern from residents.

Green Party councillors could bring a motion to a council meeting tonight, January 28, asking colleagues to oppose the registration of the word, according to the  Bicester Advertisernewspaper.

In October 2018, Oxford University Press, a university department, applied to trademark the word ‘Oxford’ for use on merchandise such as DVDs, pencils and stickers, as well as Bibles, in the UK.

The application was submitted as a “precautionary technical step” in response to “ongoing uncertainty around Brexit”.

“We have filed an additional trademark application in the UK for the same products and services where we use the word Oxford,” according to a statement last year.

Oxford University Press has had ‘Oxford’ registered as a trademark for some products and services in the UK since 1994 and across Europe since 2000.

It owns four other trademarks, including for the university’s coat of arms, which includes the Latin phrase ‘Dominus Illuminatio Mea’ (‘The Lord is my light’). This is the motto of the university.

Green Party councillor, Dick Wolff, said he will advise the council that “its own activities, and those of its trading companies, could be impacted should the application be successful,” the Bicester Advertiser reported.

According to the paper, Wolff will tell the council that residents and businesses are concerned the registration could “negatively impact the freedom of other organisations to use the word and associated brand in their own products and services without risking challenge or incurring a fee”.

The university has said it will only pursue an infringement claim if it “believes its rights are being infringed”.

Oxford University Press’s bid has been unpopular with residents, the Bicester Advertiser said. It cited its own poll, which recorded that 83% of readers were opposed to the application.

The city council meeting will be held at Oxford Town Hall tonight from 5pm GMT.

Did you enjoy reading this story?  Sign up to our free daily newsletters and get stories like this sent straight to your inbox.

Today's top stories:

UKIPO rules against O2 in TM opposition

BlackBerry joins video compression patent pool

Israeli PM candidate accused of ‘stealing’ footage of Gaza war

Already registered?

Login to your account

To request a FREE 2-week trial subscription, please signup.
NOTE - this can take up to 48hrs to be approved.

Two Weeks Free Trial

For multi-user price options, or to check if your company has an existing subscription that we can add you to for FREE, please email Adrian Tapping at atapping@newtonmedia.co.uk


More on this story

Copyright
22 October 2014   A copyright dispute between UK publishers Oxford and Cambridge University Press and Georgia State University looks set to roll on after an appeals court dismissed an earlier ruling.