OPINION
Advertise.com, Inc., appeals the district court’s entry of a preliminary injunction barring it from using a designation or trade name that is confusingly similar to Appellees’ (“AOL”) ADVERTISING.COM mark. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). We reverse and vacate the preliminary injunction in part.
*976 Facts and Procedural History
AOL owns trademark registrations covering certain stylized representations of the mark ADVERTISING.COM. While AOL’s applications for those registrations were pending before the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”), the PTO requested that AOL disclaim the standard text version of ADVERTISING.COM to obtain registration of the stylized representations of that term. AOL refused to disclaim the standard text version of the mark, maintaining that although it did not claim exclusive rights to the term “advertising,” the standard text version of ADVERTISING.COM mark was distinctive and protectable. 1 AOL’s registrations eventually issued without the requested disclaimer.
On August 17, 2009, AOL filed a complaint against Advertise.com in the Eastern District of Virginia and shortly thereafter filed a motion for a preliminary injunction. AOL alleged that Advertise.com had infringed AOL’s trademark rights by using the designation ADVERTISE.COM and by using a stylized version of that designation that was confusingly similar to AOL’s stylized ADVERTISING.COM marks. The case was transferred to the Central District of California and the motion for a preliminary injunction was re-filed.
The district court enjoined Advertise.com from using “any design mark or logo that is confusingly similar to the stylized forms of AOL’s ADVERTISING.COM marks” and from using the designation and trade name ADVERTISE.COM or any other name confusingly similar to ADVERTISING.COM. Advertise.com was not enjoined from using its website address “advertise.com.” The court found that AOL was likely to show that the ADVERTISING.COM marks, including the standard text mark, are descriptive and therefore protectable under trademark law. Because it found that the other preliminary injunction factors also weighed in favor of AOL, the district court granted the injunction. The district court denied a stay of the injunction pending appeal, but a Ninth Circuit panel granted a stay as to the portion of the injunction prohibiting Advertise.com from using the designation or trade name ADVERTISE.COM.
Advertise.com appeals the district court’s decision to grant the preliminary injunction, arguing primarily that the standard text mark ADVERTISING.COM is generic. Advertise.com, however, does not contest that part of the preliminary injunction that enjoined it from using any design mark that was confusingly similar to AOL’s stylized marks.
DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s grant of a preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion.
Marlyn Nutraceuticals, Inc. v. Mucos Pharma GmbH & Co.,
Generic terms are those that refer to “the genus of which the particular product or service is a species,”
i.e.,
the name of the product or service itself.
Id.
at 1147. “To determine whether a term [is] generic, we look to whether consumers understand the word to refer only to a particular producer’s goods or whether the consumer understands the word to refer to the goods themselves.”
Yellow Cab Co. v. Yellow Cab of Elk Grove, Inc., 419
F.3d 925, 929 (9th Cir.2005). A descriptive mark describes the qualities or characteristics of a product.
See KP Permanent Make-Up, Inc. v. Lasting Impression I, Inc.,
“Context is critical to a distinctiveness analysis.... [and the level of distinctiveness of a mark] can be determined only by reference to the goods or services that [the mark] identifies.”
Lahoti v. VeriCheck, Inc.,
are two core facets to AOL’s service offerings under its ADVERTISING.COM marks: (1) courting web publishers in order to provide them with a suite of services including placement of third-party ads on the publisher’s site, with the publisher receiving a share of the revenue generated from such placements, and (2) selling online advertising space and other services such as marketing campaign management services and research services to web marketers.
The parties likewise appear to agree that the genus of these services is “online advertising” or “internet advertising.” AOL’s brief, for example, consistently refers to the type of services it offers under the ADVERTISING.COM mark as “online-advertising services” and refers to the “online-advertising genus.” In addition to reflecting the nature of AOL’s services as described by the district court, taking “online advertising” as the genus reflects how AOL and third parties have portrayed the services offered under the mark.
With this context in mind, we consider whether ADVERTISING.COM conveys only the “genus of which [AOL’s] particular [service] is a species” or whether it is descriptive because it “directly described] the qualities or features of the product.”
One Indus., LLC v. Jim O’Neal Distrib.,
This does not, however, end our inquiry. Although these definitions persuasively suggest that ADVERTISING.COM is understood as generic by the consuming public and we give them significant weight,
see Filipino Yellow Pages, Inc.,
We disagree. We begin with our familiar “who-are-you/what-are-you” test: “A mark answers the buyer’s questions ‘Who are you?’ ‘Where do you come from?’ ‘Who vouches for you?’ But the [generic] name of the product answers the question ‘What are you?’ ”
Id.
at 1147 (quotation marks omitted, alteration in original). Applying this test strongly suggests that ADVERTISING.COM is generic. When any online advertising company, including AOL’s competitors, is asked the question “what are you?” it would be entirely appropriate for the company to respond “an advertising.com” or “an advertising dot-com.”
See id.
at 1151. Likewise, asking one of AOL’s competitors “Could you refer me to an advertising dot-com?”, one would hardly be surprised if they offered their own services.
See Yellow Cab Co.,
There is extensive Federal Circuit precedent in support of our conclusion that the combination of “.com” and “advertising” does not result in a descriptive mark. The Federal Circuit has repeatedly affirmed the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board’s (“TTAB”) findings that marks similar to ADVERTISING.COM are generic.
2
See In re Hotels.com,
AOL’s attempt to draw an analogy to
In re Steelbuilding.com
is unavailing. Although the Federal Circuit in that case vacated the TTAB’s finding that the mark STEELBUILDING.COM was generic,
In re Steelbuilding.com,
AOL also attempts to rely on
In re Oppedahl & Larson LLP,
a case in which the Federal Circuit held that PATENTS.COM was not entitled to protection because it was “merely descriptive.”
Further support for finding ADVERTISING.COM generic is evident in how the mark has been used in other domain names.
See In re Hotels.com,
AOL briefly argues that the addition of a TLD expands the meaning of a mark because a consumer will typically understand a mark with a TLD as an internet domain name. Noting that only a single entity can hold a domain name at any given time, AOL contends that marks that communicate domain names, such as ADVERTISING.COM, intrinsically denote source. Because “advertising,” standing alone, is an archetype of a generic term, were we to follow AOL’s logic we would be hard pressed to think of a ease in which the addition of a TLD would
not
result in a protectable mark. AOL is in effect proposing a per se rule that the addition of a TLD to a generic term results in a protect-able mark.
6
The PTO, TTAB, and Federal Circuit have all rejected this position, for good reason. See
In re Hotels.com,
Notwithstanding that only one entity can hold a particular domain name, granting trademark rights over a domain name composed of a generic term and a TLD grants the trademark holder rights over far more intellectual property than the domain name itself. In addition to potentially covering all combinations of the generic term with any TLD
(e.g.,
“.com”;
*981
“.biz”; “.org”), such trademark protection would potentially reach almost any use of the generic term in a domain name. For example, AOL might bring suit, alleging infringement of its ADVERTISING.COM mark, against any one of the owners of the thirty-two domain names using some form of “advertising.com.” This would make it much more difficult for these entities to accurately describe their services. “To allow trademark protection for generic terms, ... even when [they] have become identified with a first user, would grant the owner of the mark a monopoly, since a competitor could not describe his goods as what they are.”
Surgicenters,
Relatedly, the primary reason that a consumer is likely to associate a domain name with a source is that the
second-level
domain indicator (in this case the “advertising” component of “advertising.com”) is distinctive.
See Brookfield Commc’ns.,
This does not appear to be the “rare case” in which the addition of a TLD to a generic term results in a distinctive mark. Rather, the record before us demonstrates that Advertise.com is likely to rebut the presumption of validity and prevail on its claim that ADVERTISING.COM is generic. How, then, did the district court reach the opposite conclusion? Examining its decision, we conclude that it did so due to an error of law and therefore abused its discretion in granting the injunctive relief challenged here.
Stormans, Inc.,
The district court’s analysis of whether ADVERTISING.COM is generic is brief and never explicitly states the standard the court applied. The explanation of its conclusion that ADVERTISING.COM is descriptive, however, convinces us that it did not apply the correct legal standard to the facts before it. The court’s reasoning appears in a single sentence that reads “The term ‘advertising’ describes the services that AOL offers, and the ‘.com’ either indicates a commercial entity, use of the internet in association with the mark, or describes the internet-related nature of AOL’s services.”
We conclude that the district court did not correctly apply the legal standard for determining whether a mark is generic. Even if we credit the district court’s rationales as factually
accurate
— i.e., if we assume that the addition of “.com” serves the three identified functions — ADVERTIS
*982
ING.COM still conveys only the generic nature of the services offered. That “.com,” when added to a generic term, “indicates a commercial entity” does not suffice to establish that the composite is distinctive, much as AOL would not have created a protectable mark by adopting the designation “Advertising Company.”
See Goodyear’s Rubber Mfg. Co. v. Goodyear Rubber Co.,
As to the remaining two rationales, neither suggests that ADVERTISING.COM does anything more than convey the genus of the services offered under the mark:
internet
advertising. A mark is not descriptive merely because it conveys some minimal information about a product or service; if all it “describes” is the common name of the product or service, it is not protectable as a trademark.
See Filipino Yellow Pages,
We have already stated that we create no per se rule against the use of domain names, even ones formed by combining generic terms with TLDs, as trademarks. Nor, given the posture of this appeal, do we completely foreclose the possibility that AOL might prove its case on a fully developed record.
See Marlyn Nutraceuticals,
CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court and vacate the preliminary injunction to the extent that it enjoined Advertise.com from using “the designation and trade name ADVERTISE.COM or any other designation or trade name that is confusingly similar to AOL’s ADVERTISING.COM marks.” Because Advertise.com did not appeal the injunction as to its use of the stylized marks or logos that the district court found to be confusingly similar to AOL’s *983 stylized marks, we leave that portion of the injunction undisturbed.
INJUNCTION VACATED IN PART.
Notes
. AOL had applied for trademark registration over the standard text mark ADVERTISING.COM, but abandoned this registration.
. The Federal Circuit reviews the TTAB’s decision for substantial evidence.
See In re Hotels.com,
. Several TTAB decisions have also found similar marks generic.
See In re Eddie Z’s Blinds and Drapery Inc.,
. The Trademark Manual of Examining Procedure (TMEP) § 1209.02(a) provides that descriptiveness, rather than genericness, should be the initial basis for the agency's refusal to register a mark.
. On the urging of the applicants attempting to register ADVERTAIS.COM, the PTO treated "advertais” as Spanish for "advertise.” The PTO explained that, applying this definition, the mark "directly described the services.”
. Somewhat incredibly, AOL attempts to argue that it is Advertise.com who is proposing a per se rule, claiming that the result that Advertise.com urges would cast all marks composed of a generic term and a TLD into the public domain. Advertise.com proposes no such rule that a generic term combined with a TLD will always be generic, and we do not adopt such a rule here.
AOL also raises a concern that refusing to protect such marks will result in "parasite” marks such as "addvertising.com” diverting business from marks like ADVERTISING.COM. The simple response is that this is the peril of attempting to build a brand around a generic term.
. This is one of the major points of contrast between domain names and vanity telephone numbers.
See, e.g., In re Martin Container Inc.,
