Global Law Experts Logo
trademarks age ai protecting your brand

Our Expert in USA

Trademarks in the Age of AI: Protecting Your Brand When the Machine Joins In

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 weeks ago

Generative AI has fundamentally altered how brands are created, discovered, imitated and counterfeited, making trademarks in the age of AI and protecting your brand a front-burner concern for every general counsel and brand team in the United States. AI tools now generate company names, logos, slogans and product designs in seconds, while the same technology enables bad actors to produce convincing knock-offs, deepfakes and confusingly similar domains at scale. The legal framework governing distinctiveness, use in commerce and enforcement has not changed, but the factual landscape it must be applied to has shifted dramatically.

This guide maps US trademark doctrine onto that new reality and delivers step-by-step clearance, registration and enforcement playbooks that in-house and outside counsel can act on immediately.

Key Takeaways for Brand Owners

The core rules still apply, but the speed, scale and cross-border reach of AI-driven brand threats demand updated tactics. Before diving into legal analysis, here are the priority actions every brand team should have on its agenda:

  • AI does not change the legal tests. A mark must still function as a source identifier and satisfy the distinctiveness and use-in-commerce requirements set out in the Lanham Act and USPTO guidance.
  • Clearance must now cover AI-generated variations. Traditional word-mark searches miss phonetic, visual and conceptual lookalikes that generative models produce.
  • Register early and broadly. File intent-to-use (ITU) applications for high-value marks and secure defensive domain registrations, including .ai top-level domains.
  • Monitor continuously. Combine automated image-recognition tools, marketplace sweeps and social-media listening to catch AI-generated infringements in near real time.
  • Prepare an enforcement kit. Pre-draft platform takedown notices (trademark and DMCA), cease-and-desist templates and an evidence-log protocol so your team can act within hours, not weeks.
  • Protect names, voices and likenesses. Rights-of-publicity claims and emerging federal legislation give brand owners, and individual executives, additional levers against AI deepfakes.
  • Think internationally. AI-generated counterfeits cross borders instantly; coordinate registrations and watch services across the US, EU, UK and key APAC markets through the Madrid system and local counsel.

How AI Is Changing Brand Creation, Clearance and Risk

Generative AI has compressed the brand-creation cycle from months to minutes, and the infringement cycle along with it. Text-to-image generators, large language models and AI naming platforms can produce thousands of candidate logos, slogans and brand names on demand. For legitimate businesses, this accelerates go-to-market timelines. For counterfeiters, it eliminates the design bottleneck that once slowed the production of confusingly similar marks.

Market Trends: Domestic and International

Within the US, industry observers note a sharp rise in trademark applications for AI-adjacent terms and branding, as well as a corresponding increase in office actions refusing registration on descriptiveness grounds. Globally, the proliferation of .ai country-code top-level domains, originally assigned to the territory of Anguilla, has created a new vector for opportunistic registrations that mimic established brands. Meanwhile, automated marketplaces on platforms such as Amazon, Etsy and Redbubble host AI-generated product listings at a pace that outstrips manual enforcement capacity.

The cross-border dimension intensifies the challenge. An AI model trained in one jurisdiction can generate infringing outputs sold in dozens of others simultaneously. Brand owners who rely solely on US registrations may find their enforcement options limited when the infringing activity originates overseas. Coordinating trademark protection across jurisdictions, a task explored in detail in our guide on how to protect your intellectual property across borders, has never been more critical.

When Is an AI-Created or AI-Imitated Sign Protectable Under US Trademark Law?

The USPTO does not ask who, or what, designed a mark; it asks whether the mark functions as a source identifier and meets the statutory requirements for registration. Unlike copyright, where human authorship is a prerequisite, trademark law is concerned with consumer perception and commercial use. An AI-generated name or logo can therefore be registered, provided it clears the same hurdles any mark must.

Distinctiveness Tests in the United States

The USPTO evaluates marks along the well-established distinctiveness spectrum. At the strongest end sit fanciful marks (invented words with no dictionary meaning) and arbitrary marks (real words used in an unrelated context). Suggestive marks require consumer imagination to connect the mark to the goods. All three categories are considered inherently distinctive and are registrable without additional proof.

Descriptive marks, those that directly describe a feature, quality or characteristic of the goods, are registrable only if the applicant can demonstrate acquired distinctiveness (also called secondary meaning). Under Section 2(f) of the Lanham Act, this generally requires evidence of substantially exclusive and continuous use in commerce, often over a period of five years or longer, as explained in the USPTO’s guidance on claiming acquired distinctiveness. Generic terms can never function as trademarks and are permanently barred from registration.

AI-generated branding tends to cluster in the descriptive-to-suggestive range, because language models optimise for immediate comprehensibility. Brand teams using AI tools should therefore screen outputs rigorously and push for fanciful or arbitrary candidates that will enjoy broader protection from the outset.

Use in Commerce and Specimens

Regardless of how a mark is created, the applicant must demonstrate bona fide use of the mark in commerce, or file an intent-to-use application under Section 1(b), and eventually submit specimens showing the mark as consumers encounter it on goods or in connection with services. AI involvement in the design process does not excuse this requirement. Counsel should ensure that the applicant (a natural person or legal entity) controls the mark and directs its use, maintaining a clear chain of ownership distinct from the AI tool provider.

Clearance in the AI Era: Tools, Pitfalls and Bad-Faith Filings

AI-powered clearance tools have improved search speed and similarity scoring, but they introduce new blind spots that counsel must account for. Generative paraphrasing means that two AI systems can independently produce marks that are phonetically or conceptually near-identical without either appearing in existing trademark databases. Traditional knockout searches that rely on exact-string matching will miss these AI-generated near-misses.

How to Structure Clearance Searches

A robust clearance workflow in an AI-influenced market should proceed in stages:

  1. Manual multi-jurisdiction search. Query the USPTO’s Trademark Electronic Search System (TESS), WIPO’s Global Brand Database and key national registries for exact and phonetic matches.
  2. AI-assisted similarity scoring. Use AI clearance platforms that evaluate visual, phonetic and conceptual similarity, but treat results as a supplement to, not a replacement for, human analysis.
  3. Domain and handle checks. Search .com, .ai and other relevant TLDs, as well as social-media handles and marketplace seller names, for conflicting use.
  4. Watch-service setup. Establish ongoing monitoring through commercial trademark-watch providers to catch new filings and uses that emerge after clearance.

Defensive Domain and Handle Strategy, Addressing the .ai Domain Trademark Risk

The .ai domain extension has become strongly associated with artificial-intelligence businesses, making it a prime target for opportunistic registrations. Brand owners should secure .ai variants of their core marks defensively, even if they have no current plans to operate an AI-focused product. Where a confusingly similar .ai domain has already been registered, UDRP proceedings remain an effective, and relatively fast, mechanism for recovery.

The rise of bad-faith trademark filings linked to AI branding trends also warrants attention. Industry observers report a wave of applications seeking to register generic or descriptive AI-related terms, some filed with the apparent intent to extract licensing fees rather than to use the marks in commerce. Monitoring new filings and filing timely oppositions is an essential defensive measure.

Enforcing Trademarks Against AI-Generated Imitation and Counterfeits

Trademark enforcement against AI-driven infringement follows familiar legal channels but demands faster response times and new forms of evidence. AI enables counterfeiters to generate product images, marketing copy and even entire storefronts that closely imitate established brands, then deploy them across multiple platforms simultaneously.

Step-by-Step Enforcement Playbook

  1. Detect. Use automated brand-monitoring services that combine image-recognition AI, text-matching and marketplace crawlers to flag potential infringements.
  2. Preserve evidence. Screenshot infringing listings with timestamps, capture URLs, archive AI-generated outputs and record any metadata identifying the model or service used to generate the content.
  3. Send platform notices. Most major platforms (Amazon Brand Registry, Meta’s IP reporting tools, Google’s Trademark Complaint form) accept trademark-based takedown requests. Draft a clear notice identifying the registered mark, the infringing content and the basis for confusion.
  4. Escalate where needed. If a platform does not act or the infringer re-appears, escalate to formal cease-and-desist correspondence or UDRP proceedings for domain disputes.
  5. Litigate strategically. Reserve civil trademark infringement and dilution actions for cases involving serious commercial harm, repeat infringers or situations where injunctive relief is essential.

When to Litigate Versus Escalate to the Platform

Litigation is resource-intensive and should be a last resort in most AI-infringement scenarios. Platform takedowns resolve the majority of cases within days to weeks at minimal cost. Litigation becomes the appropriate tool when the infringer operates outside established platform ecosystems, when damages are substantial, or when a court order is needed to compel disclosure of the AI tools or accounts used to generate the infringing material. Border enforcement, working with US Customs and Border Protection to record trademarks and intercept counterfeit goods, provides an additional layer for physical products created with AI-assisted design.

Evidentiary Challenges Unique to AI Infringement

Proving the source and intent behind AI-generated infringement can be difficult. Outputs may not carry metadata identifying the model or user. Repeated, automated regeneration of slightly varied infringing content can outpace one-at-a-time takedown efforts. Counsel should work with forensic technologists to trace provenance where possible and focus enforcement messaging on the commercial use of confusingly similar outputs rather than on the generation process itself.

Protecting Name, Voice and Likeness: Rights of Publicity and AI

AI deepfakes targeting executives, founders and public figures represent a distinct, and growing, category of brand risk that sits at the intersection of trademark law, rights of publicity and emerging legislation. Generative AI can clone a person’s voice, face and mannerisms with minimal source material, enabling fraud, reputational harm and unauthorised endorsements.

Rights of publicity are primarily governed by state law in the US, and the scope of protection varies significantly. Some states recognise post-mortem publicity rights, a topic explored in depth in our article on whether you can use the image of a dead celebrity in the US, while others limit claims to living individuals. At the federal level, proposed legislation such as the NO FAKES Act has sought to establish a uniform federal right protecting individuals against unauthorised AI-generated replicas of their voice and likeness. Brand owners and their counsel should monitor the legislative status of such proposals on Congress.gov, as enactment would significantly expand available remedies.

Tactical Checklist for Celebrities and Executives

  • Register personal names as trademarks where they function as source identifiers for goods or services (e.g., branded product lines, media properties).
  • File right-of-publicity registrations in states that offer them and maintain records of commercial use.
  • Update talent and endorsement contracts to include explicit AI-use restrictions and model-training prohibitions.
  • Enrol in platform-specific protection programmes (e.g., YouTube’s likeness-protection tools, Meta’s verified-identity systems).
  • Prepare rapid-response protocols with pre-approved legal notices and designated escalation contacts.

International Portfolio and Cross-Border Enforcement in an AI Market

AI-generated infringements rarely respect national boundaries, making international trademark protection essential rather than optional. An AI model hosted in one country can generate infringing content consumed worldwide. Effective enforcement therefore requires registrations and counsel in every key market.

Where to Prioritise Registrations and Watch Services

The Madrid Protocol allows applicants to file a single international application designating multiple member jurisdictions, streamlining the process. However, enforcement mechanisms differ by country, EU trademark holders can rely on the EUIPO’s centralised opposition and cancellation procedures, while enforcement in APAC markets often requires country-specific registrations and local counsel familiar with domestic platforms and regulatory bodies. For a comprehensive overview of cross-border strategies, see the international intellectual property practice guide.

Jurisdiction Primary Registration Route Key Enforcement Lever
United States USPTO direct filing or Madrid designation Lanham Act infringement/dilution; UDRP; platform takedowns; CBP recordation
European Union EUIPO (EU trademark) or Madrid designation EUTM infringement actions; centralised opposition; Digital Services Act obligations on platforms
United Kingdom UKIPO direct filing or Madrid designation Trade Marks Act 1994; passing off; Nominet DRS for .uk domains
Key APAC Markets (China, Japan, South Korea) National office filing or Madrid designation Administrative enforcement (China); local litigation; platform-specific IP programmes

Practical Brand-Protection Checklist: What to Do in the Next 90 Days

Immediate, structured action reduces exposure. The following checklist translates the legal analysis above into a 90-day action plan:

  1. Audit AI-created marks. Review any brand elements generated with AI tools for distinctiveness risk and ensure you hold clear ownership and provenance records.
  2. File or update registrations. Prioritise intent-to-use applications for marks not yet in commerce; file Section 2(f) evidence for descriptive marks with established secondary meaning.
  3. Secure defensive domains. Register .ai, .com and other relevant TLD variants of core brand names.
  4. Deploy monitoring. Activate trademark watch services, image-recognition sweeps and marketplace monitoring across Amazon, Etsy, Alibaba and social platforms.
  5. Update vendor and AI-provider contracts. Add clauses addressing IP ownership of AI-generated outputs, indemnification for infringement and restrictions on training models with your proprietary brand assets.
  6. Assemble your enforcement kit. Pre-draft platform takedown notices, cease-and-desist letters and a standardised evidence log with the following column headings: Date detected | Platform/URL | Screenshot file | Mark at issue | Action taken | Outcome | Follow-up date.

Enforcement Routes Versus AI Infringement: Comparison Table

Enforcement Route When to Use Pros and Typical Timeline
Platform notice / takedown (marketplaces, social media) First-line response for AI outputs hosted on third-party platforms Fast and low cost; depends on platform policy; resolution often within days
Rights-of-publicity / state-law takedown Name, voice or likeness deepfakes targeting individuals Effective for personality infringements; state-by-state variation; weeks to months
Trademark cease and desist / UDRP for domains Confusing use of brand or domain-based impersonation Good for domain seizure and stopping branded impersonation; UDRP typically 1–2 months
Civil trademark infringement / dilution suit Serious commercial harm or repeat infringers Powerful; injunctive relief available; costly; timeline months to years
DMCA copyright takedown AI output incorporates copyrighted material Fast on platforms that honour DMCA; only available where copyright claims exist

Illustrative Scenarios: AI and Trademark Protection in Practice

The following hypothetical scenarios illustrate how the principles discussed above apply in practice. They are composites drawn from patterns commonly reported in legal commentary, not references to specific adjudicated cases.

  • The AI-generated brand name that was merely descriptive. A start-up uses a language model to generate a product name that directly describes the product’s function. The USPTO issues an office action refusing registration on descriptiveness grounds. The applicant succeeds on appeal by submitting five years of sales data, advertising expenditure and consumer-survey evidence under Section 2(f), demonstrating acquired distinctiveness.
  • The deepfake endorsement. An AI-generated video featuring a CEO’s likeness appears on social media, falsely endorsing a competitor’s product. The company invokes state right-of-publicity statutes and files platform takedown requests. The content is removed within 48 hours, but the incident prompts the company to register the CEO’s name as a trademark for its branded services and update talent contracts with AI-specific prohibitions.
  • The .ai domain squatter. A well-known consumer brand discovers that a third party has registered its brand name under the .ai TLD and is using it to sell counterfeit merchandise. A UDRP proceeding results in transfer of the domain within two months, reinforced by evidence of the complainant’s prior trademark registration and the respondent’s lack of legitimate interest.
  • Marketplace counterfeits at scale. AI-generated product images closely imitating a luxury brand’s trade dress flood an e-commerce platform. The brand owner uses image-recognition monitoring to detect listings in near real time and files batch takedown requests through the platform’s IP-protection programme, removing over 90 per cent of infringing listings within one week.

Next Steps: Protecting Your Brand in an AI-Driven Landscape

Trademarks in the age of AI demand the same legal rigour as ever, applied faster and across a wider surface area. The three highest-priority actions for any brand team are: first, conduct an immediate clearance and distinctiveness audit of all AI-generated brand elements; second, register core marks and defensive domains before opportunistic filers do; and third, build an always-on monitoring and enforcement infrastructure that matches the speed of AI-driven threats. Trademark protection in an AI market is not a one-time project but an ongoing operational discipline. For guidance tailored to your portfolio, consult a qualified intellectual property practitioner through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact James A. Gale at Cozen O’Connor, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. United States Patent & Trademark Office, Trademark Basics
  2. USPTO, How to Claim Acquired Distinctiveness Under Section 2(f)
  3. AALRR, Trademarks in the Age of AI
  4. Fenwick, Protecting Brands in the Age of AI
  5. Varnum LLP, Using Generative AI in Branding and Trademarks
  6. Data Privacy and Security Insider, Using Trademarks to Protect IP from AI
  7. RAND, Artificial Intelligence Impacts on Copyright Law
  8. Christian & Barton, Generative AI and Trademark Infringement Risks
  9. Congress.gov, Federal Legislation (NO FAKES Act and Related Bills)

can you challenge an arbitrator's decision
By Global Law Experts

posted 5 hours ago

Find the right Advisory Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading advisory professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
ADVISORS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF ADVISORS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GAE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Trademarks in the Age of AI: Protecting Your Brand When the Machine Joins In

Send welcome message

Custom Message