Category Archives: Law Libraries
What Are You Going to Do With All the Time You Save Using PLI Discover PLUS?
PLI Discover PLUS Featured on UNC’s Carolina Blawg!
UNC has access to Practising Law Institute Discover PLUS and the Katherine Everett Law Library made its patrons aware of the subscription through its blog, Carolina Blawg!
Do you subscribe to PLI Discover PLUS? If so, a blog post or library page is a great way to spread the word to your patrons. Contact the PLI Library Help Desk for images and information you can add to your blogs, intranet, subject guides, practice area pages, listservs, or any other way you’re reaching your patrons!
Librarian Advisory Luncheon at the SLA 2014 Annual Conference in Vancouver
PLI is hosting a Librarian Advisory Lunch at the SLA 2014 Annual Conference in Vancouver and we would like to extend our warmest invitation to you!
The Practising Law Institute (PLI) will be holding a Librarian Advisory Lunch at SLA 2014. PLI is developing a taxonomy with the aim of making our content even easier to find and discover online and will showcase our prototype over lunch. We will demonstrate the exciting future enhancements that are currently planned for Practising Law Institute’s Discover PLUS, our eBook library containing our authoritative legal Treatises, Answer Books, Course Handbooks, Program Transcripts, and Forms.
Our lunch will take place on Monday, June 9th from 12:00 – 2:00 PM at the Convention Center. Please email libraryrelations@pli.edu to RSVP and we’ll include location details in your confirmation.
We look forward to seeing you in Vancouver!
Law Day Sale
PLI’s Kane on Trademark Law on Wells IP Law
Check out this nice mention of PLI’s treatise, Kane on TradeMark Law: A Practitioner’s Guide 6th Edition , on Wells IP Law here. You can purchase the book by clicking here. Kane on Trademark Law is also available on our eBook library platform PLI Discover PLUS. Interested in learning more about this book or PLI Discover PLUS? Contact PLI’s Library Relations team at PLI Library Relations or call 877-900-5291.
Kane on Trademarks – Book Review
By: Nicholas Wells | April 19, 2014
Siegrun D. Kane. 2013. Kane on Trademark Law: A Practitioner’s Guide (6th Edition). Practising Law Institute: New York. 1071 pages. $395 from publisher; $375.25 from Amazon.com
I work in several areas of law—copyright, social media, technology agreements, advertising and promotions—but at the moment, I spend the largest part of my day working on trademark matters. If you’re familiar with trademark law, you know that the leading work in the field, cited by hundreds of court decisions, is J. Thomas Mc Carthy’s treatise, McCarthy on Trademarks and Unfair Competition. Coming in at seven volumes—and growing, and with a front matter and Table of Contents that stretches 154 pages, McCarthy can be… unwieldy. The $ 4,500 price tag may also be a concern for many smaller firms or lawyers who don’t spend all day handling trademarks. Still, it is the resource everyone quotes.
So when PLI offered to send me a review copy of Kane on Trademark Law by Siegrun D. Kane, I was curious to see how it compared.
The short answer: For most lawyers and in-house counsel, Kane’s book is the better choice.
Don’t get me wrong. If you’re litigating trademark cases in federal court, you’ll probably like having McCarthy around. But most of us don’t do that. Kane on Trademark Law, now in its Sixth Edition, seems committed to remaining a one-volume work. That choice is emblematic of its usefulness. Everything you’re likely to need to know about trademarks is in your hand. Kane is subtitled A Practitioner’s Guide. Not a Judge’s Guide, or a Professor’s Guide, or even a Litigator’s Guide.
The Kane text is well organized, well footnoted, and well written, with headings that make it easy to find the topic you need. (It also has a 60-page index.) There are sections on false advertising, litigation, Internet infringements, licensing, and dilution, in addition to the sections you’d expect to find on clearing marks for registration, prosecution procedures, and proceedings before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board.
Kane also comes with a CD-ROM that contains the entire text of the volume in searchable, linked PDF files, carefully formatted to match the printed book. I’ve found this to be tremendously useful.
As an example of the different approach of Kane and McCarthy, consider the key trademark issue of likelihood of confusion between trademarks. Kane has 35 pages on the topic, plus another 20 focused on counterfeiting. McCarthy devotes Volume 3 to the topic—800 or so pages—plus innumerable related sections that appear in other volumes (See, e.g., Chapter 31, Volume 6, Defenses to Infringement). Or consider the sections on Inter Partes TTAB proceedings. Kane has 54 pages of succinct text on topics that include procedures, grounds, defenses, burden of proof, and review routes for TTAB decisions. McCarthy devotes… well, you get the idea.
I love McCarthy, but I keep using Kane because most of the time, I don’t have the time to use McCarthy. And my clients don’t have the money. Kane reminds me of the points I need to know. It references the statutory sections and leading cases. It summarizes and recommends practice steps without as much scholarly background. Most days, it’s just the better tool for what I need.
I think that’s also true for those, like in-house counsel, who are dealing with trademarks, social media, advertising, employment, real estate leases, contract disputes… and that’s just before lunch. Kane on Trademarks will serve in-house counsel by providing guidance on most trademark issues that they are likely to face. They’ll hire litigators to take trademark cases to the Federal Circuit and they will use McCarthy.
Kane does miss some areas that I wish it included. There appears to be nothing about ex parte appeals at the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board. Perhaps it’s not a critical topic for most readers, but I’d like to see more on it. There is a little about using the Madrid Protocol, but virtually nothing about international trademark protection. This is clearly a book about U.S. law, but given its apparent target audience, at least a brief section on how international trademarks operate with some strategy pointers and references would be appropriate. Finally, there isn’t much about the procedures for handling disputes. True, those procedures are based on the TTAB manual and the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. But guidance in a book like this goes a long way to help those not familiar with the rules.
Despite a few minor weaknesses, Kane on Trademarks seems to spend a lot of time on the corner of my desk.
Happy National Library Week!
In honor of National Library Week, Practising Law Institute if offering librarians a discount to our Answer Books for today only (4/16/2014). The offer today is 65% off the entire 19 Volume Answer Book Series . Or a 40% discount off 1 Answer Book of your choice. This offer is $1,675 for the 19 Volume Answer Book Series, which is a retail value of $4,785.
The Library Relations team would also like to encourage you to access our online publications through a subscription to PLI Discover PLUS. A subscription to PLUS gives you access our Course Handbooks, Treatises and Answer Books. You can also search for PLI Forms to provide legal templates for your day-to-day tasks, and transcripts to many of our PLI programs and seminars.
From the Library Relations team at PLI, enjoy the recognition you and your library deserve!
Our Free Library One-Hour Briefing on Changing from Two to One Legal Database Vendor is Now Available On-Demand!
PLI and LLAGNY have teamed up to offer free one-hour audio briefings for librarians, researchers, attorneys, and allied professionals. Last month we offered a session on moving from two legal database vendors to one, which is now available on-demand!
Our new economic world continually requires cost savings as a constant standard. Law Firms, Legal Departments and Government Libraries have subscribed to multiple major legal vendors since the 1980s. But currently, there are questions as to whether this should remain the standard. Can legal research be effectively performed with only one database? If a choice has to be made, how will that affect the efficacy of legal research?
Lecture Topics:
- Responding to the new normal: How many legal databases can/should we provide?
- Learn what steps should be taken in making the decision to select one vendor.
- Review your usage and content to maximize the offerings in your contract.
- What issues may you face after the decision has been made to go to one vendor?
The program faculty members are: Nancy Hancock of CURRENT ISSUES: A Library Service; Susan van Beek-McKenna of Budd Larner, P.C.; and Tanya Whorton of Crowell & Moring, LLP.
This briefing, featuring instruction from experts in library management, was conceived and created in cooperation with the Law Library Association of Greater New York (LLAGNY) and Practising Law Institute (PLI). This briefing is chaired by Janice E. Henderson, Patricia Barbone and Jill Gray.
Click here to listen to the on-demand program.
Georgetown University Blogs about PLI Discover PLUS!
Discover PLUS was recently featured on Georgetown Law School’s Due Process blog, which keeps students updated about new resources and technology that the Edward Bennett Williams Law Library has to offer.
We’re happy to report that Georgetown is a new Discover PLUS subscriber.
Are you a law school interested in a PLUS subscription? If so, email or call (877-900-5291) us today!
Interview with our AALL 2013 Kayak & Paddle Sweepstakes Winner: Ruck DeMinico
On Monday July 15th 2013 at the 106th American Association of Law Libraries (AALL) Annual Meeting & Conference, Practising Law Institute announced its lucky sweepstakes winner, Ruck DeMinico of Merlin Law Group.
Tell us a little about yourself, your work, and what a typical day looks like for you:
I started off my legal career as a trial attorney and litigated for the first dozen years, trying a couple hundred jury trials. I had always been interested in librarianship and decided to go back to get my degree and work at what I really enjoyed. I don’t know that there is a typical day – unless controlled chaos can be considered typical. Being a sole librarian for a firm with offices on both coasts and in seven states, research questions can come in on any jurisdiction and, as in any private firm, they are all considered rush/priority by the sender and can come at any time of the day or night. I also handle the traditional library functions, vendor relations, DMS/KM, edit and maintain the firm blogs, create handout materials and PowerPoints for presentations by firm attorneys at seminars, and along with the Managing Attorney and COO am a member of the firm’s Management team.
Have you kayaked before? Where will you take your Discover PLUS branded Kayak:
I have, in the Miami/Everglades area. I love canoeing and spend as much free time as I can on the rivers here in Florida. I’m looking forward to exploring the mangroves around Tampa Bay with the kayak and may take fishing back up now that I can maneuver in the mangroves.
What do you like most about your job as Knowledge Manager of Merlin Law Group:
The constant change in what I’m doing. Every day is different, with new challenges.
As an attorney and law librarian, what do you think are the most challenging issues/trends shaping the legal industry today?:
I would say ESI/e-discovery, especially for smaller cases that may still have large amounts of electronic data to provide – where the use of vendors may be cost prohibitive.
Are you familiar with Discover PLUS, PLI’s eBook library? Did you receive a demo at PLI’s booth at the American Association of Law Libraries (AALL) Conference in Seattle:
I did see the demo at AALL. I like the ‘all-inclusive’ business model, rather than having to choose which individual books to purchase or subscribe to.
Discover PLUS provides complete online access to PLI’s Course Handbooks, Treatises, Answer Books, Legal Forms and Program Transcripts.





