In the notice sent to Amazon, the startup’s lawyer asserts Amazon's act of "deceitful diversion" was unlawful under trademark laws and is also prohibited under the AdWord policy of search major
Flintobox said that it has approached Amazon with the complaint first in July and then Again in October. In return the startup only got a template response.
Flintobox is suing the etailer for damages of Rs 10 lakh.
"We had to start a social media campaign against Amazon because the company was not responding. The decision to go legal is also one taken when few alternatives were in view,"
A representative for
Google did not reply to ET's queries on the development.
Intellectual property law expert and search engine optimisation technicians point to the possibility of a software tool - Amazon in its reply mentions an automated system - that decides which "phrase" to bid on Google to drive traffic.
"I would assume that many people had searched for Flintobox on Amazon, and, may be, a real-time bidding tool for
Trademark law experts say the law protects an entity against infringement just with the same vigour in the virtual world. However in this case, where software has generated a trademarked brand as keyword, the case gets more complex.