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The ALS Association has raked in more than $94 million in donations from the ice bucket challenge in just under a month. Now, the organization is asking for something else: Trademarks to the phrases ice bucket challenge and ALS ice bucket challenge.
One trademark attorney calls the effort shameful.
Two trademark applications, filed last week, claim that the ALS Association owns the phrases for the purposes of charitable giving. Both applications are available for public viewing on the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Web site, here and here.
Trademark attorney Erik Pelton spotted the applications Wednesday. I was upset, he told The Post. Similar to the reaction I had last year when I saw the applications for Boston Strong.
The latter phrase was a popular rallying cry in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombings.
While Pelton believes that the ice bucket challenge trademark applications will probably be rejected, the applications themselves were enough for the Virginia-based attorney to draw attention to them on his blog. The reasons in general one seeks to protect a trademark is to prevent others from using it, Pelton said in an interview Thursday. I find this to be shameful, because I hope that they would never consider preventing some other charity from using the phrase.
In his blog post about the application, Pelton writes that hes not sure they can claim real ownership of the phrases in question, pointing out that many others have taken the challenge in the name of (and/or contributed to) other charities. In the interview, he added: Its been great to raise awareness and money.
If the applications are approved, Pelton said the charity could use the registration to try and take other groups to court who use it without its permission; to take control of social media accounts using the phrases ice bucket challenge or ALS ice bucket challenge; and to potentially stop other charities from using it.
In an e-mailed statement to The Post, the ALS Association defended its trademark applications, noting that the charity only applied after seeing many examples of unscrupulous profiteers trying to drive revenue to themselves, instead of the fight against ALS.
The Post recently took a look at some of the ice bucket challenge commodities on the market, including a Halloween costume, several T-shirts and a pin. Profits from those products dont necessarily go to towards ALS research, or to any other charity.
Other critics of the trademark applications noted that the ice bucket challenge did not originate with the ALS Association, although its exact origins are somewhat in dispute. The challenge has been used to raise money for other charities and causes, including funding for a hospice in Florida.
In its statement, the ALS Association added that it secured the blessing of the families who initiated the challenge before filing the trademark applications.
The ALS Association isnt the only charity challengers have donated to in recent weeks: As Mashable reported, when the challenge caught on in early June, on Facebook, it wasnt specifically about ALS. That particular association began in July.
On its application, the ALS Association says the first use of both phrases was at least as early as Aug. 4.
Although well have to wait for the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to rule on the applications, there might be a clue in how the federal office handled all those Boston Strong trademark filings. Earlier this year, the USPTO rejected several applications for the phrase, including one from the makers of Sam Adams beer.
Heres the full statement from the ALSA:
The ALS Association is beside itself with gratitude to the millions of people who have participated in the Ice Bucket Challenge, and particularly grateful to the families who should fairly be credited with making the campaign go viral. The ALS Association took steps to trademark the Ice Bucket Challenge after seeing many examples of unscrupulous profiteers trying to drive revenue to themselves, instead of the fight against ALS. We secured the blessing of the families who initiated the challenge, which they provided without hesitation. The Association did this as a good faith effort to protect the integrity of the Ice Bucket Challenge. We are intent on preventing for-profit companies from capitalizing on this amazing, almost wholly grass-roots, and charitable campaign to raise money and awareness for the fight against ALS.