Will You Add?
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Legal > Cyber Law > Trademark Infringement Issues For Pay-per-Click (PPC) Advertisers

Tags

  • simply
  • aside
  • qualified
  • would otherwise
  • every month
  • creation creating

  • Links

  • Six Super Easy Weight Loss Tips
  • Quit Smoking Right Now MP3 Course - Can You Really Quit Cigarettes in a Few Hours?
  • A Closer Look At The All-New 2008 Hummer H2
  • Will You Add? - Trademark Infringement Issues For Pay-per-Click (PPC) Advertisers

    Secrets To Finding Hot Penny Stocks
    The secret key to any successful penny stocks trading is the preparation. Know what you are buying and why you are buying it. There are a number of factors that can help you to make a more informed and, hopefully, more profitable decision.Financial Information: The earnings to price equation is always a good indicator of the health, or otherwise, of a penny stocks company. If this ratio is lower than many of the other companies in a similar industry then this is a good indication that the company may be in a great position.The Board of Directors: Find out about the CEO and directors, do they have a nice history of running this type of company. A penny stocks company with bad trading figures that has just acquired a strong CEO may be about to change direction.Do the Books Balance? If the company has a good cash flow then it could be a good a good addition to your penny stocks portfolio. But look a little more closely to see if they have debts. A light debt load in comparison to turnover shouldn’t be a problem, but if the debt is large then interest payments could begin to stack up and affect the
    n text, image alt tags and keyword meta tags that may include your trademarked names.

    Then document your findings. For search engine results and PPC results use a “screen capture” of the page displaying the mark infringement. For mark infringements that are visible on a website, save the entire page’s code as a .txt file.

    What about if you are you seeing an infringement in organic search results, but when you click on the page, there is no infringement? They may be using a cloaked page which includes your trademark. To check this out you will need to view the search engine’s cached page on file. Make sure to save a copy of this code as well.

    You will need to document your findings properly by dating the violation as well as the site owner’s complete contact information. Use http://www.dnsstuff.com to get the whois information for the site. Once you have all of this documented you will need to send your findings to the appropriate search engine.

    You may also want to take the legal route, in which case you should keep a record of all your documentation to present to your legal counsel.

    The best way to gather evidence is to hire a third party to collect evidence against the infringer of your trademark or copyrighted material. Recently at Search Engine Strategies in New York City during February of 2006, Deborah Wilcox, Partner of Baker & Hostetler LLP who specializes in trademark and copyright areas of law said, “Use a third party to make print outs and audit the search results. If the case goes to court you will need hard evidence for the judge.”

    Contact the

    Answer To Relieving Pain In Business
    The previous Sangaraja, the Supreme Patriarch of the monastic order (of Thailand), once went on a tour of China, where someone offered him a very beautiful teacup. It was unlike anything he'd ever seen. He thought, "Oh! The people here have real faith in me, to offer me this beautiful teacup!" And as soon as the teacup was in his hand, immediately he was suffering. Where should I put it? Where is safe to keep it? He couldn't stop worrying it would break.Before he had that teacup, he was fine. Once he had it, he wanted to show it off to the people back home in Thailand. He put it in his bag and kept telling everyone to watch out that the teacup didn't get broken. "Hey! Careful, please!" Everywhere he was watching out for it. He had nothing but suffering. Before, this suffering didn't exist, but now there was the heaviness of having the teacup.So he boarded his plane back to Thailand. When he arrived he warned the novices, "Be careful! Don't let the teacup break! You laypeople, watch out! There's something fragile here!" This went on all the time, suffering because of attachment to the cup. Finally, one
    Yahoo has just announced they will no longer allow PPC advertisers to advertise or bid on trademarked terms.

    Could this be a trend of things to come from the other major search players?

    MSN’s new adCenter (still in beta) states you are not allowed to infringe trademarks within their editorial guidelines (see policy below).

    However, Google still maintains a strong stance in allowing advertisers to bid on trademarked search terms as long as the trademarked term is not used within the advertiser’s ad-copy.

    Numbers to Consider

    Next to click fraud, trademark violations are the second largest concern to Pay-Per-Click (PPC) advertising. Out of the total number of searches online, 20% are trademark searches. Meaning, company owned trademarks such as “Pontiac”, account for 20% of all search traffic. While 1 in 5 searches for trademark terms may seem high, most conversions do not originate from trademarked terms. A study by comScore and Yahoo Search Marketing (Overture) found most buyers do not search by manufacturer or product name. Rather, buyers use broad search terms that do not include a manufacturer’s name. Broad search terms account for 70% of total searches and 60% of total conversions.

    Search Engine’s Policy on PPC Trademark Bidding

    Yahoo on Trademarks:

    "On March 1, 2006, Yahoo! Search Marketing will modify its editorial guidelines regarding the use of keywords containing trademarks. Previously, we allowed competitive advertising by allowing advertisers to bid on third-party trademarks if those advertisers offered detailed comparative information about the trademark owners' products or services in comparison to the competitive products and services that were offered or promoted on the advertisers' site.

    In order to more easily deliver quality user experiences when users search on terms that are trademarks, Yahoo! Search Marketing has determined that we will no longer allow bidding on keywords containing competitor trademarks."

    MSN AdCenter on Trademarks

    “Microsoft requires all advertisers to agree that they will not bid on keywords, or use in the text of their advertisements, any word whose use would infringe the trademark of any third party or would otherwise be unlawful or in violation of the rights of any third party”.

    Google Adwords on Trademarks:

    “Google takes allegations of trademark infringement very seriously and, as a courtesy, we're happy to investigate matters raised by trademark owners. Also, our Terms and Conditions with advertisers prohibit intellectual property infringement by advertisers and make it clear that advertisers are responsible for the keywords they choose to generate advertisements and the text that they choose to use in those advertisements.”

    Solution or More Problems

    With all Engines moving toward a TM standard, it would have many benefits to both advertisers and searchers. This standard would be good for marketers who would have to be more creative in their copy creation creating increased demand for qualified marketers which would translate into higher fees. Search Engines hosting the ads would maintain revenue levels, but online public relations firms may lose as they would not be required to police search engines for their clients with trademarks. Lastly, the mark owner would continue to be protected and user experience would not be affected.

    Case Study:

    I’m currently working with an AdWords client in a circumstance where their competitors are bidding on their trademarked search terms. Aside from the constant policing and reporting for trademark violations used in the ads themselves, adspend to secure top positions for their ads has skyrocketed from an initial $2.00 per click to $15.00 per click. Additionally, monthly spend has increased from $1,200 to nearly $30,000.

    I have to go back to my client with an estimated budget of $500,000 for the rest of this year to control the space for their own branded trademarked term. I am reluctant to do that as it doesn’t make sense with the announcement from Yahoo on their new trademark policy. Given the level of aggression by the competitors and the extortionate cost now been borne by my client there is only one solution and that is to stop all advertisers from bidding on the terms. In my opinion, it is simply not right that a business owner has to spend $500,000+ to buy their own branded term that has already cost them millions of dollars to build. This is $500,000+ in revenue for Google which is being generated by a policy that is beyond elementary business terms. Yahoo and MSN have recognized the injustice of this policy and have taken steps to change it.

    If we cannot treat this policy on a case by case basis, then I have no alternative than to advise my client that we cannot help them any further and their only option is to resort to legal action against Google.

    Google also advises that you take the matter up with individual advertisers which in many cases are impossible with private registrations and foreign companies. You could add to your high costs dramatically to have to send cease desists to all infringers. Many will ignore you.

    The classic bait and switch does not seem to apply to the Internet. Many companies are okay with their terms being bought for comparison shopping and by re-sellers. The solution here is for those companies to give permission to Google to allow their re-sellers to purchase the name. With the strength and sophistication of Google’s technology how difficult can this be? I doubt it is any more cumbersome than filtering search results for China.

    Your Defense Against Trademark Violations

    Website companies where the majority of their revenue is generated through online sales depend heavily on search engines to generate traffic to their website. In order to defend against trademark infringements you will need to conduct search audits at least once every month. You not only need to look over organic search results, but also paid search results or PPC contextual ads. You should look through the top 30 results of the search listings.

    For organic search engine results you should look at both the questionable result and the site displayed in the result. When looking over the possible violator’s site, don’t just look over the visible content on the site; look over the code as well to uncover hidden text, image alt tags and keyword meta tags that may include your trademarked names.

    Then document your findings. For search engine results and PPC results use a “screen capture” of the page displaying the mark infringement. For mark infringements that are visible on a website, save the entire page’s code as a .txt file.

    What about if you are you seeing an infringement in organic search results, but when you click on the page, there is no infringement? They may be using a cloaked page which includes your trademark. To check this out you will need to view the search engine’s cached page on file. Make sure to save a copy of this code as well.

    You will need to document your findings properly by dating the violation as well as the site owner’s complete contact information. Use http://www.dnsstuff.com to get the whois information for the site. Once you have all of this documented you will need to send your findings to the appropriate search engine.

    You may also want to take the legal route, in which case you should keep a record of all your documentation to present to your legal counsel.

    The best way to gather evidence is to hire a third party to collect evidence against the infringer of your trademark or copyrighted material. Recently at Search Engine Strategies in New York City during February of 2006, Deborah Wilcox, Partner of Baker & Hostetler LLP who specializes in trademark and copyright areas of law said, “Use a third party to make print outs and audit the search results. If the case goes to court you will need hard evidence for the judge.”

    Contact the S

    A House Is for Protection, A Home Should Be Protected
    People will do whatever is in their capacity to provide the comfort their family deserves. They work hard enough in order for them to have a stable job and eventually to have more income to support them to attain that goal. They are willing to waste and wear out all of their efforts and talents just for their family’s comfort and protection. Most people who have enough income will invest a large amount of money to secure a comfortable house. Some people who have only a little income will invest in a smaller but safe and comfortable house for their family.The point here is this: it does not matter if the person is rich or poor. What is important here is that with the income that a person has, he is willing to provide a decent house for his family. But how important must a house be to the family that is willing to invest such large amounts of money to obtain one. A house is not an investment that will earn you money, unless you decide to sell it, but its importance rests upon the comfort and protection that it can provide the family, not the money it can earn. The very reason why most people are willing to buy
    ormation about the trademark owners' products or services in comparison to the competitive products and services that were offered or promoted on the advertisers' site.

    In order to more easily deliver quality user experiences when users search on terms that are trademarks, Yahoo! Search Marketing has determined that we will no longer allow bidding on keywords containing competitor trademarks."

    MSN AdCenter on Trademarks

    “Microsoft requires all advertisers to agree that they will not bid on keywords, or use in the text of their advertisements, any word whose use would infringe the trademark of any third party or would otherwise be unlawful or in violation of the rights of any third party”.

    Google Adwords on Trademarks:

    “Google takes allegations of trademark infringement very seriously and, as a courtesy, we're happy to investigate matters raised by trademark owners. Also, our Terms and Conditions with advertisers prohibit intellectual property infringement by advertisers and make it clear that advertisers are responsible for the keywords they choose to generate advertisements and the text that they choose to use in those advertisements.”

    Solution or More Problems

    With all Engines moving toward a TM standard, it would have many benefits to both advertisers and searchers. This standard would be good for marketers who would have to be more creative in their copy creation creating increased demand for qualified marketers which would translate into higher fees. Search Engines hosting the ads would maintain revenue levels, but online public relations firms may lose as they would not be required to police search engines for their clients with trademarks. Lastly, the mark owner would continue to be protected and user experience would not be affected.

    Case Study:

    I’m currently working with an AdWords client in a circumstance where their competitors are bidding on their trademarked search terms. Aside from the constant policing and reporting for trademark violations used in the ads themselves, adspend to secure top positions for their ads has skyrocketed from an initial $2.00 per click to $15.00 per click. Additionally, monthly spend has increased from $1,200 to nearly $30,000.

    I have to go back to my client with an estimated budget of $500,000 for the rest of this year to control the space for their own branded trademarked term. I am reluctant to do that as it doesn’t make sense with the announcement from Yahoo on their new trademark policy. Given the level of aggression by the competitors and the extortionate cost now been borne by my client there is only one solution and that is to stop all advertisers from bidding on the terms. In my opinion, it is simply not right that a business owner has to spend $500,000+ to buy their own branded term that has already cost them millions of dollars to build. This is $500,000+ in revenue for Google which is being generated by a policy that is beyond elementary business terms. Yahoo and MSN have recognized the injustice of this policy and have taken steps to change it.

    If we cannot treat this policy on a case by case basis, then I have no alternative than to advise my client that we cannot help them any further and their only option is to resort to legal action against Google.

    Google also advises that you take the matter up with individual advertisers which in many cases are impossible with private registrations and foreign companies. You could add to your high costs dramatically to have to send cease desists to all infringers. Many will ignore you.

    The classic bait and switch does not seem to apply to the Internet. Many companies are okay with their terms being bought for comparison shopping and by re-sellers. The solution here is for those companies to give permission to Google to allow their re-sellers to purchase the name. With the strength and sophistication of Google’s technology how difficult can this be? I doubt it is any more cumbersome than filtering search results for China.

    Your Defense Against Trademark Violations

    Website companies where the majority of their revenue is generated through online sales depend heavily on search engines to generate traffic to their website. In order to defend against trademark infringements you will need to conduct search audits at least once every month. You not only need to look over organic search results, but also paid search results or PPC contextual ads. You should look through the top 30 results of the search listings.

    For organic search engine results you should look at both the questionable result and the site displayed in the result. When looking over the possible violator’s site, don’t just look over the visible content on the site; look over the code as well to uncover hidden text, image alt tags and keyword meta tags that may include your trademarked names.

    Then document your findings. For search engine results and PPC results use a “screen capture” of the page displaying the mark infringement. For mark infringements that are visible on a website, save the entire page’s code as a .txt file.

    What about if you are you seeing an infringement in organic search results, but when you click on the page, there is no infringement? They may be using a cloaked page which includes your trademark. To check this out you will need to view the search engine’s cached page on file. Make sure to save a copy of this code as well.

    You will need to document your findings properly by dating the violation as well as the site owner’s complete contact information. Use http://www.dnsstuff.com to get the whois information for the site. Once you have all of this documented you will need to send your findings to the appropriate search engine.

    You may also want to take the legal route, in which case you should keep a record of all your documentation to present to your legal counsel.

    The best way to gather evidence is to hire a third party to collect evidence against the infringer of your trademark or copyrighted material. Recently at Search Engine Strategies in New York City during February of 2006, Deborah Wilcox, Partner of Baker & Hostetler LLP who specializes in trademark and copyright areas of law said, “Use a third party to make print outs and audit the search results. If the case goes to court you will need hard evidence for the judge.”

    Contact the

    Try Live Chat
    Live chat is a great way to communicate with business associates witout having to go through the hassle of e-mail or phones. Phones are instant communication, but you cannot send files over the phone, and emails are wonderful if they happen quickly. However, often times email can take a long time, and there are mistakes involved. With mass amounts of junk mail, people tend to erase things they need, or important emails can get lost in the bulk folder. Therefore, instant messaging is the perfect business software solution. Instant messaging offers avatar operators, and other avatar help ans well as hlpful 24/7 services. While it's true that the web allows you to push your online brochure to people all over the world, most websites fail to offer any form of interaction whatsoever, and having a webcam at your desk to allow people to watch you work is hardly the cutting edge of professionalism is it?If, however, you can offer some form of live sales and/or support from your website, then you're offering the visitor a very useful means of contacting you with their questions. The problem is that setting this
    ns firms may lose as they would not be required to police search engines for their clients with trademarks. Lastly, the mark owner would continue to be protected and user experience would not be affected.

    Case Study:

    I’m currently working with an AdWords client in a circumstance where their competitors are bidding on their trademarked search terms. Aside from the constant policing and reporting for trademark violations used in the ads themselves, adspend to secure top positions for their ads has skyrocketed from an initial $2.00 per click to $15.00 per click. Additionally, monthly spend has increased from $1,200 to nearly $30,000.

    I have to go back to my client with an estimated budget of $500,000 for the rest of this year to control the space for their own branded trademarked term. I am reluctant to do that as it doesn’t make sense with the announcement from Yahoo on their new trademark policy. Given the level of aggression by the competitors and the extortionate cost now been borne by my client there is only one solution and that is to stop all advertisers from bidding on the terms. In my opinion, it is simply not right that a business owner has to spend $500,000+ to buy their own branded term that has already cost them millions of dollars to build. This is $500,000+ in revenue for Google which is being generated by a policy that is beyond elementary business terms. Yahoo and MSN have recognized the injustice of this policy and have taken steps to change it.

    If we cannot treat this policy on a case by case basis, then I have no alternative than to advise my client that we cannot help them any further and their only option is to resort to legal action against Google.

    Google also advises that you take the matter up with individual advertisers which in many cases are impossible with private registrations and foreign companies. You could add to your high costs dramatically to have to send cease desists to all infringers. Many will ignore you.

    The classic bait and switch does not seem to apply to the Internet. Many companies are okay with their terms being bought for comparison shopping and by re-sellers. The solution here is for those companies to give permission to Google to allow their re-sellers to purchase the name. With the strength and sophistication of Google’s technology how difficult can this be? I doubt it is any more cumbersome than filtering search results for China.

    Your Defense Against Trademark Violations

    Website companies where the majority of their revenue is generated through online sales depend heavily on search engines to generate traffic to their website. In order to defend against trademark infringements you will need to conduct search audits at least once every month. You not only need to look over organic search results, but also paid search results or PPC contextual ads. You should look through the top 30 results of the search listings.

    For organic search engine results you should look at both the questionable result and the site displayed in the result. When looking over the possible violator’s site, don’t just look over the visible content on the site; look over the code as well to uncover hidden text, image alt tags and keyword meta tags that may include your trademarked names.

    Then document your findings. For search engine results and PPC results use a “screen capture” of the page displaying the mark infringement. For mark infringements that are visible on a website, save the entire page’s code as a .txt file.

    What about if you are you seeing an infringement in organic search results, but when you click on the page, there is no infringement? They may be using a cloaked page which includes your trademark. To check this out you will need to view the search engine’s cached page on file. Make sure to save a copy of this code as well.

    You will need to document your findings properly by dating the violation as well as the site owner’s complete contact information. Use http://www.dnsstuff.com to get the whois information for the site. Once you have all of this documented you will need to send your findings to the appropriate search engine.

    You may also want to take the legal route, in which case you should keep a record of all your documentation to present to your legal counsel.

    The best way to gather evidence is to hire a third party to collect evidence against the infringer of your trademark or copyrighted material. Recently at Search Engine Strategies in New York City during February of 2006, Deborah Wilcox, Partner of Baker & Hostetler LLP who specializes in trademark and copyright areas of law said, “Use a third party to make print outs and audit the search results. If the case goes to court you will need hard evidence for the judge.”

    Contact the

    Offer In Compromise
    A taxpayer in financial difficulties has a number of options to resolve his federal tax debts. Offer in compromise is an ideal solution for a person on the verge of financial break down. It is a proposal specially designed to settle a taxpayer’s tax debts for less than what he owes. It is an agreement between the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the taxpayer. However, the settlement of the tax debts is subject to government discretion. Not all taxpayers can avail this benefit. Less than half of the offers in compromise requests submitted are actually accepted by the Internal Revenue Service. In case the offer is rejected, the taxpayer can move the IRS Appeals Office.In order to qualify for an offer in compromise, you have to meet certain prerequisites. You must prove that you are facing financial difficulties. Applying for an offer in compromise is a lengthy process, requiring lots of consideration. Application should be submitted in IRS form 656 with a fee. Tax payers below the poverty line are exempted from paying the application fee. In addition to form 656, the tax payer has to submit a collection infor
    t that we cannot help them any further and their only option is to resort to legal action against Google.

    Google also advises that you take the matter up with individual advertisers which in many cases are impossible with private registrations and foreign companies. You could add to your high costs dramatically to have to send cease desists to all infringers. Many will ignore you.

    The classic bait and switch does not seem to apply to the Internet. Many companies are okay with their terms being bought for comparison shopping and by re-sellers. The solution here is for those companies to give permission to Google to allow their re-sellers to purchase the name. With the strength and sophistication of Google’s technology how difficult can this be? I doubt it is any more cumbersome than filtering search results for China.

    Your Defense Against Trademark Violations

    Website companies where the majority of their revenue is generated through online sales depend heavily on search engines to generate traffic to their website. In order to defend against trademark infringements you will need to conduct search audits at least once every month. You not only need to look over organic search results, but also paid search results or PPC contextual ads. You should look through the top 30 results of the search listings.

    For organic search engine results you should look at both the questionable result and the site displayed in the result. When looking over the possible violator’s site, don’t just look over the visible content on the site; look over the code as well to uncover hidden text, image alt tags and keyword meta tags that may include your trademarked names.

    Then document your findings. For search engine results and PPC results use a “screen capture” of the page displaying the mark infringement. For mark infringements that are visible on a website, save the entire page’s code as a .txt file.

    What about if you are you seeing an infringement in organic search results, but when you click on the page, there is no infringement? They may be using a cloaked page which includes your trademark. To check this out you will need to view the search engine’s cached page on file. Make sure to save a copy of this code as well.

    You will need to document your findings properly by dating the violation as well as the site owner’s complete contact information. Use http://www.dnsstuff.com to get the whois information for the site. Once you have all of this documented you will need to send your findings to the appropriate search engine.

    You may also want to take the legal route, in which case you should keep a record of all your documentation to present to your legal counsel.

    The best way to gather evidence is to hire a third party to collect evidence against the infringer of your trademark or copyrighted material. Recently at Search Engine Strategies in New York City during February of 2006, Deborah Wilcox, Partner of Baker & Hostetler LLP who specializes in trademark and copyright areas of law said, “Use a third party to make print outs and audit the search results. If the case goes to court you will need hard evidence for the judge.”

    Contact the

    How To Achieve Financial Independence By Teaching Other Individuals
    Welcome to new members. Thank you for Subscribing to help-u-b-free ezine.Greetings,Welcome to Help-u-b-free Ezine. I am Bill McCammon. Help-u-b-free is a Fenstoke Enterprises, Inc company about helping people change their future for ever and enjoy life to it's fullest. This is all about YOU!I will share with you how you can get out of debt in 8-12 years and save thousand of dollars of interest with simple changes that the banks do not want us to know.There is large number of families today experiencing most of or part of the challenges which I have listed below. We will offer you a solution which will provide you with a life full of happiness you deserve.How would it make you feel to get a fresh start in life and have your own personal plan to achieve financial independence? Freedom! Have you experienced any of the following?* More Bankruptcies today than there has been in history.* Unemployment rate higher than it has ever been.* Moms and Dads spending less time with their family.* More Consumer Debt than ever.* People are finding Social Securit
    n text, image alt tags and keyword meta tags that may include your trademarked names.

    Then document your findings. For search engine results and PPC results use a “screen capture” of the page displaying the mark infringement. For mark infringements that are visible on a website, save the entire page’s code as a .txt file.

    What about if you are you seeing an infringement in organic search results, but when you click on the page, there is no infringement? They may be using a cloaked page which includes your trademark. To check this out you will need to view the search engine’s cached page on file. Make sure to save a copy of this code as well.

    You will need to document your findings properly by dating the violation as well as the site owner’s complete contact information. Use http://www.dnsstuff.com to get the whois information for the site. Once you have all of this documented you will need to send your findings to the appropriate search engine.

    You may also want to take the legal route, in which case you should keep a record of all your documentation to present to your legal counsel.

    The best way to gather evidence is to hire a third party to collect evidence against the infringer of your trademark or copyrighted material. Recently at Search Engine Strategies in New York City during February of 2006, Deborah Wilcox, Partner of Baker & Hostetler LLP who specializes in trademark and copyright areas of law said, “Use a third party to make print outs and audit the search results. If the case goes to court you will need hard evidence for the judge.”

    Contact the Search Engines

    You can also contact the search engines directly if you believe an advertiser is infringing on your trademark. The respective search engine contact information is below.

    Google
    Google Inc.
    Attn: Google AdWords, Trademark Complaints
    2400 Bayshore Parkway
    Mountain View, CA 94043

    Yahoo! Search Marketing
    Formerly: Overture Services, Inc.
    Attn: Business & Legal Affairs - Trademarks
    74 N. Pasadena Ave., 3rd Floor
    Pasadena, California 91103
    Fax: 626 685-5601

    Microsoft Corporation
    Attn: MSN Search Trademark Concerns
    One Microsoft Way
    Redmond, WA 98052
    USA

    Trademark Infringement Resources
    International Trademark Association www.inta.org
    American Patent & Trademark Law Center www.patentpending.com
    Internet patent, copyright, trademark, and legal issues www.bitlaw.com
    Trademarks on the Internet www.bitlaw.com/trademark/internet.html

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/129546/atriclecheck-Trademark-Infringement-Issues-For-PayperClick-PPC-Advertisers.html">Trademark Infringement Issues For Pay-per-Click (PPC) Advertisers</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/129546/atriclecheck-Trademark-Infringement-Issues-For-PayperClick-PPC-Advertisers.html]Trademark Infringement Issues For Pay-per-Click (PPC) Advertisers[/url]

    Related Articles:

    An Internet Marketing Mentor Can Help You Create Steady Income

    Bad Credit Payday Loans Australia - No Fax Required

    Financing a Vacation Property With a Second Home Loan

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com