A French court has upheld a previous ruling against
Google that
its
Adwords
advertising breached the trademark of
Louis
Vuitton.
As part of the ruling, the Court of Appeals in Paris increased the damages
awarded to Louis Vuitton from €200,000 to €300,000, with an extra €60,000 in
costs going to the luxury goods firm.
In the original trial, the French court found against Google for allowing
traders to use the Louis Vuitton name to advertise counterfeit versions of its
goods next to legitimate companies selling the real thing.
Google said in a statement that the points raised in the original case had
now been dealt with, and that the new ruling did not raise any new issues.
"We have a trademark policy which prevents bids on other people's registered
trademarks, and we do not allow people to advertise with Adwords for counterfeit
products," said Google.
The case began in 2004 and was first awarded in Louis Vuitton's favour back
in February 2005.
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