Trademark Overview
On Wednesday, October 30, 2024, a trademark application was filed for DREAM.JUSTICE with the United States Patent and Trademark Office. The USPTO has given the DREAM.JUSTICE trademark a serial number of 98827925. The federal status of this trademark filing is NEW APPLICATION - RECORD INITIALIZED NOT ASSIGNED TO EXAMINER as of Wednesday, October 30, 2024. This trademark is owned by Dream.org. The DREAM.JUSTICE trademark is filed in the Advertising, Business and Retail Services, Insurance & Financial Services, and Education & Entertainment Services categories with the following description:
Conducting fellowship training programs in the field of skills needed to improve the world, namely, grassroots and digital organizing, campaigns and coalition-building, advocacy skills, working with elected officials, marketing, communications and social media skills, self-care, fundraising and grant writing, activist storytelling; Educational services, namely, conducting convenings, seminars, workshops, discussions, and training sessions in the field of criminal justice reform and distribution of educational materials in connection therewith; Charitable services, namely, providing training in the field of skills and leadership development; Leadership development training in the field of effective organizing, campaign, advocacy, fundraising and grant writing, and media skills; Providing online non-downloadable electronic publications in the nature of articles, reports, and guides in the field of criminal justice reform
Providing grants to people working on criminal justice reform
Promoting public awareness of the need to to end mass incarceration, overhaul the prison industry, reform our criminal justice system, and create new economic opportunities in low-income disadvantaged communities most impacted by high incarceration rates; Promoting the interests of members of the public who want to end mass incarceration, overhaul the prison industry, reform our criminal justice system, and create new economic opportunities in low-income disadvantaged communities most impacted by high incarceration rates; Charitable services, namely, facilitating coordination and collaboration among people and organizations looking for solutions to end mass incarceration, overhaul the prison industry, reform our criminal justice system, and create new economic opportunities in low-income disadvantaged communities most impacted by high incarceration rates; Organizing and conducting social media and other public information campaigns to promote public awareness of the need to end mass in...