Lawsuits Over Competitive Keyword Advertising Are Still Stupid–NRRM v. American Dream Auto Protect

Technology & Marketing Law Blog 2025-08-07

This case involves two competitors in the industry of auto protection plans (VSCs). The rival’s affiliates bought the plaintiff’s trademark “CarShield” for competitive keyword ads. The plaintiff alleged:

Defendant’s agents do not label or indicate that their generic ads direct a customer to Defendant and other competitors who pay for the websites to send them consumer leads. The advertised websites prevent consumers from linking to Plaintiff’s websites and obtaining Plaintiff’s VSCs….Consumers are deceived into believing they are learning about, providing personal information for, and ultimately obtaining quotes for Plaintiff’s VSCs.

Trademark Infringement

Since the 8th Circuit revitalized the initial interest confusion doctrine in 2021 💔, it rides to the plaintiff’s rescue here.

The court has no idea how to define IIC. Check out this confused statement:

[IIC] occurs when “an alleged infringer uses a competitor’s mark to direct consumer attention to its product.” Lerner & Rowe PC v. Brown Engstrand & Shely, LLC, 119 F.4th 711, 718 (9th Cir. 2024). The confusion creates initial consumer interest “even though no actual sale is completed as a result of the confusion.” Jim S. Adler, P.C. v. McNeil Consultants, LLC, 10 F.4th 422, 427 (5th Cir. 2021) (internal quotations omitted). Initial interest confusion is a “bait and switch” approach that allows “a competitor to get its foot in the door by confusing consumers.” Dorr-Oliver, Inc. v. Fluid-Quip, Inc., 94 F.3d 376, 382 (7th Cir. 1996)….

The Eighth Circuit held that initial-interest confusion only occurs when a jury question exists as to the issue of consumer sophistication. Thus, if consumers are sophisticated, such as professional purchasers, initial interest confusion is not possible. However, having relatively recently adopted the initial interest confusion theory, the Eighth Circuit has not yet addressed a situation such as the one in this case concerning the purchase of a plaintiff’s trademarks for advertising with an internet search engine.

Nevertheless, the court says the plaintiff’s allegations are good enough:

It is plausible, based on Plaintiff’s allegations, that a consumer searching for the term “CarShield” and shown advertisements for carwarrantyoffers.com, goautowarranty.com, consumeraffairs.com, or forbes.com would believe those websites offered CarShield’s VSCs. The advertisements included in Plaintiff’s amended complaint use generic text and are not clearly labeled as belonging to Defendant, a competitor

(Note: the Network Automation case said that the ads need to be labeled as ads, not that they needed to be labeled as belonging to the defendant).

At this stage of the litigation, when courts have repeatedly stated the likelihood of confusion is usually a fact determination reserved for summary judgment, the Court finds Plaintiff has plausibly alleged Defendant infringed Plaintiff’s trademarks through initial interest confusion.

The court cites the Warby Parker and Lerner & Rowe opinions but clearly didn’t engage with the standards they articulated, which would have instantly doomed this case.

Secondary Trademark Infringement

The court dismisses the secondary trademark infringement claims. The complaint doesn’t sufficiently allege an agency relationship with the ad buyers, or for that matter, who the purported agents are.

The court also says the plaintiff didn’t allege intentional inducement:

Hiring an agent to purchase keywords on internet search engines is not enough to establish trademark infringement; therefore, it is also not enough to establish contributory liability for trademark infringement. [cite to the Warby Parker decision]

Um…I think I’m missing something fundamental. The court just denied the motion to dismiss the direct trademark infringement due to IIC, yet the court seems to say that competitive keyword advertising categorically isn’t direct trademark infringement. I believe only one of these propositions can be true. 🤷‍♂️

So I don’t really understand what happened here or why the court dismissed the case in entirely, with leave to amend. Call me confused. Perhaps the court will shut this case down for good in the next round.

Case Citation: NRRM, LLC v. American Dream Auto Protect, Inc., 2025 WL 2106971 (E.D. Mo. July 28, 2025)

More Posts About Keyword Advertising

* NJ Supreme Court Blesses Lawyers’ Competitive Keyword Ads (With a Baffling Caveat)Ninth Circuit Tells Trademark Owners to Stop Suing Over Competitive Keyword Ads–Lerner & Rowe v. Brown EngstrandSecond Circuit Tells Trademark Owners to Stop Suing Over Competitive Keyword AdvertisingCatching Up on Two Keyword Ad CasesCompetitor Isn’t Responsible for Google Knowledge Panel’s Contents–International Star Registry v. RGIFTSTIL: “Texas Tamale” Is an Enforceable Trademark–Texas Tamale v. CPUSA2Internal Search Results Aren’t Trademark Infringing–PEM v. PeninsulaWhen Do Inbound Call Logs Show Consumer Confusion?–Adler v McNeilCourt Denies Injunction in Competitive Keyword Ad Lawsuit–Nursing CE Central v. ColibriCompetitive Keyword Ad Lawsuit Fails…Despite 236 Potentially Confused Customers–Lerner & Rowe v. Brown EngstrandMore on Law Firms and Competitive Keyword Ads–Nicolet Law v. Bye, GoffYet More Evidence That Keyword Advertising Lawsuits Are Stupid–Porta-Fab v. Allied ModularGriper’s Keyword Ads May Constitute False Advertising (Huh?)–LoanStreet v. TroiaTrademark Owner Fucks Around With Keyword Ad Case & Finds Out–Las Vegas Skydiving v. Groupon1-800 Contacts Loses YET ANOTHER Trademark Lawsuit Over Competitive Keyword Ads–1-800 Contacts v. Warby ParkerCourt Dismisses Trademark Claims Over Internal Search Results–Las Vegas Skydiving v. GrouponGeorgia Supreme Court Blesses Google’s Keyword Ad Sales–Edible IP v. GoogleCompetitive Keyword Advertising Claim Fails–Reflex Media v. LuxyThink Keyword Metatags Are Dead? They Are (Except in Court)–Reflex v. LuxyFifth Circuit Says Keyword Ads Could Contribute to Initial Interest Confusion (UGH)–Adler v. McNeilGoogle’s Search Disambiguation Doesn’t Create Initial Interest Confusion–Aliign v. lululemonOhio Bans Competitive Keyword Advertising by LawyersWant to Engage in Anti-Competitive Trademark Bullying? Second Circuit Says: Great, Have a Nice Day!–1-800 Contacts v. FTCSelling Keyword Ads Isn’t Theft or Conversion–Edible IP v. GoogleCompetitive Keyword Advertising Still Isn’t Trademark Infringement, Unless…. –Adler v. Reyes & Adler v. McNeilThree Keyword Advertising Decisions in a Week, and the Trademark Owners Lost Them AllCompetitor Gets Pyrrhic Victory in False Advertising Suit Over Search Ads–Harbor Breeze v. Newport FishingIP/Internet/Antitrust Professor Amicus Brief in 1-800 Contacts v. FTCNew Jersey Attorney Ethics Opinion Blesses Competitive Keyword Advertising (…or Does It?)Another Competitive Keyword Advertising Lawsuit Fails–Dr. Greenberg v. Perfect Body ImageThe Florida Bar Regulates, But Doesn’t Ban, Competitive Keyword AdsRounding Up Three Recent Keyword Advertising Cases–Comphy v. Amazon & MoreDo Adjacent Organic Search Results Constitute Trademark Infringement? Of Course Not…But…–America CAN! v. CDFThe Ongoing Saga of the Florida Bar’s Angst About Competitive Keyword AdvertisingYour Periodic Reminder That Keyword Ad Lawsuits Are Stupid–Passport Health v. AvanceRestricting Competitive Keyword Ads Is Anti-Competitive–FTC v. 1-800 ContactsAnother Failed Trademark Suit Over Competitive Keyword Advertising–JIVE v. Wine Racks AmericaNegative Keywords Help Defeat Preliminary Injunction–DealDash v. ContextLogicThe Florida Bar and Competitive Keyword Advertising: A Tragicomedy (in 3 Parts)Another Court Says Competitive Keyword Advertising Doesn’t Cause ConfusionCompetitive Keyword Advertising Doesn’t Show Bad Intent–ONEpul v. BagSpotBrief Roundup of Three Keyword Advertising Lawsuit DevelopmentsInteresting Tidbits From FTC’s Antitrust Win Against 1-800 Contacts’ Keyword Ad Restrictions1-800 Contacts Charges Higher Prices Than Its Online Competitors, But They Are OK With That–FTC v. 1-800 ContactsFTC Explains Why It Thinks 1-800 Contacts’ Keyword Ad Settlements Were Anti-Competitive–FTC v. 1-800 ContactsAmazon Defeats Lawsuit Over Its Keyword Ad Purchases–Lasoff v. AmazonMore Evidence Why Keyword Advertising Litigation Is WaningCourt Dumps Crappy Trademark & Keyword Ad Case–ONEPul v. BagSpotAdWords Buys Using Geographic Terms Support Personal Jurisdiction–Rilley v. MoneyMutualFTC Sues 1-800 Contacts For Restricting Competitive Keyword AdvertisingCompetitive Keyword Advertising Lawsuit Will Go To A Jury–Edible Arrangements v. Provide CommerceTexas Ethics Opinion Approves Competitive Keyword Ads By LawyersCourt Beats Down Another Competitive Keyword Advertising Lawsuit–Beast Sports v. BPIAnother Murky Opinion on Lawyers Buying Keyword Ads on Other Lawyers’ Names–In re NaertKeyword Ad Lawsuit Isn’t Covered By California’s Anti-SLAPP LawConfusion From Competitive Keyword Advertising? FuhgeddabouditCompetitive Keyword Advertising Permitted As Nominative Use–ElitePay Global v. CardPaymentOptionsGoogle And Yahoo Defeat Last Remaining Lawsuit Over Competitive Keyword AdvertisingMixed Ruling in Competitive Keyword Advertising Case–Goldline v. RegalAnother Competitive Keyword Advertising Lawsuit Fails–Infogroup v. DatabaseLLCDamages from Competitive Keyword Advertising Are “Vanishingly Small”More Defendants Win Keyword Advertising LawsuitsAnother Keyword Advertising Lawsuit Fails BadlyDuplicitous Competitive Keyword Advertising Lawsuits–Fareportal v. LBF (& Vice-Versa)Trademark Owners Just Can’t Win Keyword Advertising Cases–EarthCam v. OxBlueWant To Know Amazon’s Confidential Settlement Terms For A Keyword Advertising Lawsuit? Merry Christmas!Florida Allows Competitive Keyword Advertising By LawyersAnother Keyword Advertising Lawsuit Unceremoniously Dismissed–Infostream v. AvidAnother Keyword Advertising Lawsuit Fails–Allied Interstate v. Kimmel & SilvermanMore Evidence That Competitive Keyword Advertising Benefits Trademark OwnersSuing Over Keyword Advertising Is A Bad Business Decision For Trademark OwnersFlorida Proposes to Ban Competitive Keyword Advertising by LawyersMore Confirmation That Google Has Won the AdWords Trademark Battles WorldwideGoogle’s Search Suggestions Don’t Violate Wisconsin Publicity Rights LawAmazon’s Merchandising of Its Search Results Doesn’t Violate Trademark LawBuying Keyword Ads on People’s Names Doesn’t Violate Their Publicity RightsWith Its Australian Court Victory, Google Moves Closer to Legitimizing Keyword Advertising GloballyYet Another Ruling That Competitive Keyword Ad Lawsuits Are Stupid–Louisiana Pacific v. James HardieAnother Google AdWords Advertiser Defeats Trademark Infringement LawsuitWith Rosetta Stone Settlement, Google Gets Closer to Legitimizing Billions of AdWords RevenueGoogle Defeats Trademark Challenge to Its AdWords ServiceNewly Released Consumer Survey Indicates that Legal Concerns About Competitive Keyword Advertising Are Overblown

The post Lawsuits Over Competitive Keyword Advertising Are Still Stupid–NRRM v. American Dream Auto Protect appeared first on Technology & Marketing Law Blog.