India Registers Its First Olfactory (Smell) Trademark: A Historic Milestone in Non-Conventional Trademark Protection
Summary
The Indian Trade Marks Registry made history by accepting the country's first olfactory (smell) trademark - a rose-like floral fragrance infused into tyres by Sumitomo Rubber Industries - marking a paradigm shift in Indian trademark law by recognizing non-conventional intangible marks beyond traditional words, logos, shapes, colours, and sounds.
A Historic First for Indian Trademark Law
On November 21, 2025, the Indian Trade Marks Registry achieved a historic milestone by accepting India's first olfactory (smell) trademark: "a rose-like floral fragrance infused into tyres" filed by Sumitomo Rubber Industries. This landmark decision opens an entirely new dimension in Indian intellectual property law, recognizing that trademark protection extends beyond conventional sensory marks such as words, logos, shapes, colours, and even sounds, to encompass intangible non-conventional marks like scent. The acceptance of this olfactory mark represents a significant evolution in the Registry's interpretation of what constitutes a protectable trademark under the Trade Marks Act, 1999, and aligns India with a select group of jurisdictions worldwide that recognize smell as a valid indicator of commercial origin.
On November 21, 2025, the Indian Trade Marks Registry achieved a historic milestone by accepting India's first olfactory (smell) trademark: "a rose-like floral fragrance infused into tyres" filed by Sumitomo Rubber Industries. This landmark decision opens an entirely new dimension in Indian intellectual property law, recognizing that trademark protection extends beyond conventional sensory marks such as words, logos, shapes, colours, and even sounds, to encompass intangible non-conventional marks like scent. The acceptance of this olfactory mark represents a significant evolution in the Registry's interpretation of what constitutes a protectable trademark under the Trade Marks Act, 1999, and aligns India with a select group of jurisdictions worldwide that recognize smell as a valid indicator of commercial origin.
Appointment of Amicus Curiae
Recognizing that olfactory trademarks represented uncharted territory in Indian jurisprudence, the Trade Marks Registry appointed Pravin Anand, Advocate as amicus curiae to assist in determining the registrability of scent marks under Indian law. In his submissions, Mr. Anand opined that non-conventional marks such as scents are, in principle, capable of registration under the Trade Marks Act, 1999, provided they satisfy two fundamental statutory criteria: (i) graphic representation as required under Section 2(1)(zb) of the Act, and (ii) distinctiveness sufficient to function as indicators of commercial origin. This legal opinion provided the foundational framework for the Registry's substantive examination of Sumitomo's application.
Recognizing that olfactory trademarks represented uncharted territory in Indian jurisprudence, the Trade Marks Registry appointed Pravin Anand, Advocate as amicus curiae to assist in determining the registrability of scent marks under Indian law. In his submissions, Mr. Anand opined that non-conventional marks such as scents are, in principle, capable of registration under the Trade Marks Act, 1999, provided they satisfy two fundamental statutory criteria: (i) graphic representation as required under Section 2(1)(zb) of the Act, and (ii) distinctiveness sufficient to function as indicators of commercial origin. This legal opinion provided the foundational framework for the Registry's substantive examination of Sumitomo's application.
Critical Evaluation: Graphical Representation Under Section 2(1)(zb)
The first and most formidable challenge in registering an olfactory trademark lies in satisfying the statutory requirement of "graphical representation" under Section 2(1)(zb) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999. Unlike visual or auditory marks that can be depicted through images, text, or musical notation, smells are inherently intangible and resist conventional modes of representation. To overcome this obstacle, Sumitomo Rubber Industries submitted a groundbreaking scientific model developed by researchers from the Indian Institute of Information Technology (IIIT) Allahabad. This model employs advanced sensory analysis techniques to map the "rose-like smell" in a seven-dimensional olfactory space, decomposing the scent into its constituent smell families: floral, fruity, woody, nutty, pungent, sweet, and minty. Each dimension represents the intensity or presence of a particular olfactory characteristic, creating a comprehensive sensory fingerprint of the fragrance.
The Registry meticulously evaluated whether this seven-dimensional representation satisfied the established legal standards for graphic representation, which require that any mark representation must be: clear, precise, self-contained, intelligible, objective, and durable. These criteria were established to ensure that third parties can understand the exact scope of the trademark proprietor's exclusive rights without ambiguity. The Registry concluded that Sumitomo's scientific model met all these requirements. The representation was clear and precise because it quantified specific olfactory characteristics; self-contained because it did not require reference to external samples that might degrade over time; intelligible because it could be understood by persons skilled in sensory analysis; objective because it was based on scientific measurement rather than subjective description; and durable because the mathematical model could be reproduced consistently over time without alteration. This rigorous analysis demonstrates the Registry's commitment to applying traditional trademark principles to novel categories of marks while ensuring legal certainty.
The first and most formidable challenge in registering an olfactory trademark lies in satisfying the statutory requirement of "graphical representation" under Section 2(1)(zb) of the Trade Marks Act, 1999. Unlike visual or auditory marks that can be depicted through images, text, or musical notation, smells are inherently intangible and resist conventional modes of representation. To overcome this obstacle, Sumitomo Rubber Industries submitted a groundbreaking scientific model developed by researchers from the Indian Institute of Information Technology (IIIT) Allahabad. This model employs advanced sensory analysis techniques to map the "rose-like smell" in a seven-dimensional olfactory space, decomposing the scent into its constituent smell families: floral, fruity, woody, nutty, pungent, sweet, and minty. Each dimension represents the intensity or presence of a particular olfactory characteristic, creating a comprehensive sensory fingerprint of the fragrance.
The Registry meticulously evaluated whether this seven-dimensional representation satisfied the established legal standards for graphic representation, which require that any mark representation must be: clear, precise, self-contained, intelligible, objective, and durable. These criteria were established to ensure that third parties can understand the exact scope of the trademark proprietor's exclusive rights without ambiguity. The Registry concluded that Sumitomo's scientific model met all these requirements. The representation was clear and precise because it quantified specific olfactory characteristics; self-contained because it did not require reference to external samples that might degrade over time; intelligible because it could be understood by persons skilled in sensory analysis; objective because it was based on scientific measurement rather than subjective description; and durable because the mathematical model could be reproduced consistently over time without alteration. This rigorous analysis demonstrates the Registry's commitment to applying traditional trademark principles to novel categories of marks while ensuring legal certainty.
Critical Evaluation: Distinctiveness and Consumer Recognition
The second statutory requirement examined by the Registry was distinctiveness - the capacity of the scent to function as a source identifier distinguishing Sumitomo's tyres from those of competitors. Distinctiveness analysis requires determining whether consumers encountering the mark would perceive it as indicating commercial origin rather than as a functional or ornamental feature of the product. In this case, the Registry found that the rose-like floral fragrance possessed inherent distinctiveness by virtue of its arbitrary relationship to the goods in question. Tyres manufactured from rubber compounds typically emit a characteristic petrochemical odour arising from the vulcanization process and the synthetic materials used in tyre construction. A rose-like floral scent is completely incongruous with consumer expectations for tyre smell - roses and rubber do not naturally correlate in any functional or aesthetic sense.
This arbitrariness is a powerful indicator of distinctiveness in trademark law. The Registry reasoned that precisely because tyre rubber ordinarily smells like industrial rubber, the introduction of a pleasant floral fragrance would immediately stand out to consumers as unusual and memorable. This novelty enhances the scent's capacity to function as a trademark, as consumers are likely to associate the distinctive rose-like smell specifically with Sumitomo Rubber Industries rather than perceiving it as a generic characteristic of tyres generally. The Registry also considered whether the scent might be perceived as merely functional (e.g., masking unpleasant odours) or aesthetic (merely making the product more pleasant). While the fragrance does have these incidental effects, the Registry concluded that its primary significance to consumers would be as a distinctive identifier of source, particularly given Sumitomo's marketing and branding efforts associating the scent with its corporate identity.
The second statutory requirement examined by the Registry was distinctiveness - the capacity of the scent to function as a source identifier distinguishing Sumitomo's tyres from those of competitors. Distinctiveness analysis requires determining whether consumers encountering the mark would perceive it as indicating commercial origin rather than as a functional or ornamental feature of the product. In this case, the Registry found that the rose-like floral fragrance possessed inherent distinctiveness by virtue of its arbitrary relationship to the goods in question. Tyres manufactured from rubber compounds typically emit a characteristic petrochemical odour arising from the vulcanization process and the synthetic materials used in tyre construction. A rose-like floral scent is completely incongruous with consumer expectations for tyre smell - roses and rubber do not naturally correlate in any functional or aesthetic sense.
This arbitrariness is a powerful indicator of distinctiveness in trademark law. The Registry reasoned that precisely because tyre rubber ordinarily smells like industrial rubber, the introduction of a pleasant floral fragrance would immediately stand out to consumers as unusual and memorable. This novelty enhances the scent's capacity to function as a trademark, as consumers are likely to associate the distinctive rose-like smell specifically with Sumitomo Rubber Industries rather than perceiving it as a generic characteristic of tyres generally. The Registry also considered whether the scent might be perceived as merely functional (e.g., masking unpleasant odours) or aesthetic (merely making the product more pleasant). While the fragrance does have these incidental effects, the Registry concluded that its primary significance to consumers would be as a distinctive identifier of source, particularly given Sumitomo's marketing and branding efforts associating the scent with its corporate identity.
Global Context and Comparative Analysis
India's acceptance of its first olfactory trademark places the country among a small but growing number of jurisdictions recognizing scent marks. Internationally, smell trademarks have been registered in the United States, the European Union, and Australia, though they remain rare due to the significant evidentiary burden of demonstrating distinctiveness and providing adequate graphic representation. Notable examples include the registration of a floral fragrance resembling "plumeria blossoms" for sewing thread in the United States, and the scent of fresh cut grass for tennis balls in the European Union (though the latter was subsequently cancelled). The Indian Registry's decision reflects a progressive interpretation of the Trade Marks Act aligned with international best practices while maintaining rigorous standards to ensure only genuinely distinctive scent marks receive protection.
India's acceptance of its first olfactory trademark places the country among a small but growing number of jurisdictions recognizing scent marks. Internationally, smell trademarks have been registered in the United States, the European Union, and Australia, though they remain rare due to the significant evidentiary burden of demonstrating distinctiveness and providing adequate graphic representation. Notable examples include the registration of a floral fragrance resembling "plumeria blossoms" for sewing thread in the United States, and the scent of fresh cut grass for tennis balls in the European Union (though the latter was subsequently cancelled). The Indian Registry's decision reflects a progressive interpretation of the Trade Marks Act aligned with international best practices while maintaining rigorous standards to ensure only genuinely distinctive scent marks receive protection.
Implications for Indian Trademark Practice
The registration of India's first olfactory trademark has profound implications for trademark practitioners, brand owners, and the Indian intellectual property ecosystem. First, it confirms that Indian trademark law is technologically neutral and capable of accommodating emerging forms of brand identification as commercial practices evolve. Second, it establishes important precedent regarding the standards for graphic representation of non-visual, non-auditory marks, potentially paving the way for other non-conventional marks such as taste, texture, or even digital/virtual marks. Third, it signals to businesses that investment in distinctive sensory branding can be legally protected in India, encouraging innovation in product differentiation strategies beyond traditional visual branding.
The registration of India's first olfactory trademark has profound implications for trademark practitioners, brand owners, and the Indian intellectual property ecosystem. First, it confirms that Indian trademark law is technologically neutral and capable of accommodating emerging forms of brand identification as commercial practices evolve. Second, it establishes important precedent regarding the standards for graphic representation of non-visual, non-auditory marks, potentially paving the way for other non-conventional marks such as taste, texture, or even digital/virtual marks. Third, it signals to businesses that investment in distinctive sensory branding can be legally protected in India, encouraging innovation in product differentiation strategies beyond traditional visual branding.
Practical Considerations and Challenges
Despite this landmark acceptance, prospective applicants for olfactory trademarks should recognize that registration will remain challenging and fact-specific. Applicants must provide scientifically rigorous graphic representations, demonstrate clear distinctiveness (preferably through evidence of acquired distinctiveness via extensive use), and ensure the scent is not functional or dictated by the nature of the goods. Additionally, enforcement of olfactory trademarks may present practical difficulties, as detecting and proving infringement requires sensory analysis rather than simple visual comparison. Nevertheless, Sumitomo's success demonstrates that with appropriate scientific evidence and legal argumentation, olfactory trademarks are achievable under Indian law.
Despite this landmark acceptance, prospective applicants for olfactory trademarks should recognize that registration will remain challenging and fact-specific. Applicants must provide scientifically rigorous graphic representations, demonstrate clear distinctiveness (preferably through evidence of acquired distinctiveness via extensive use), and ensure the scent is not functional or dictated by the nature of the goods. Additionally, enforcement of olfactory trademarks may present practical difficulties, as detecting and proving infringement requires sensory analysis rather than simple visual comparison. Nevertheless, Sumitomo's success demonstrates that with appropriate scientific evidence and legal argumentation, olfactory trademarks are achievable under Indian law.
Significance
The acceptance of India's first olfactory trademark represents a watershed moment in Indian intellectual property law, confirming that trademark protection extends to all forms of sensory perception capable of distinguishing commercial origin. This decision reflects the Registry's sophisticated understanding of modern branding practices and its willingness to apply traditional legal principles flexibly to accommodate innovation. The establishment of clear standards for graphic representation and distinctiveness of scent marks provides valuable guidance for future applications involving non-conventional marks. As businesses increasingly seek to create multisensory brand experiences, this landmark decision ensures that Indian trademark law remains responsive to contemporary commercial realities while maintaining rigorous standards that balance proprietor rights with public interest in competitive markets. The registration opens new frontiers for sensory branding in India and positions the country as a progressive jurisdiction in the global intellectual property landscape.
The acceptance of India's first olfactory trademark represents a watershed moment in Indian intellectual property law, confirming that trademark protection extends to all forms of sensory perception capable of distinguishing commercial origin. This decision reflects the Registry's sophisticated understanding of modern branding practices and its willingness to apply traditional legal principles flexibly to accommodate innovation. The establishment of clear standards for graphic representation and distinctiveness of scent marks provides valuable guidance for future applications involving non-conventional marks. As businesses increasingly seek to create multisensory brand experiences, this landmark decision ensures that Indian trademark law remains responsive to contemporary commercial realities while maintaining rigorous standards that balance proprietor rights with public interest in competitive markets. The registration opens new frontiers for sensory branding in India and positions the country as a progressive jurisdiction in the global intellectual property landscape.
Madras High Court Affirms Patentability of Computer-Related Innovation Featuring Technical Contribution
Court: Madras High CourtCitation: Ab Initio Technology LLC v. The Controller of Patents & DesignsJudge: Justice Senthilkumar Ramamoorthy
Summary
The Madras High Court delivered a significant ruling overturning the Patent Office's refusal of a patent application for computer-related invention, clarifying that CRIs are patentable when they demonstrate technical contribution, even without novel hardware.
The Madras High Court delivered a significant ruling overturning the Patent Office's refusal of a patent application for computer-related invention, clarifying that CRIs are patentable when they demonstrate technical contribution, even without novel hardware.
Introduction
On November 4, 2025, the Madras High Court, through Justice Senthilkumar Ramamoorthy, overturned the Patent Office's rejection of Ab Initio Technology LLC's patent application for "Graphic Representations of Data Relationship." The invention, filed in July 2010, presented a novel method for tracking and representing data lineage in complex data systems. After nearly a decade of examination and amendments, the Patent Office rejected it in July 2020 under Section 2(1)(j) for lacking novelty and inventive step, and under Section 3(k) as a "computer programme per se." The Court's intervention was sought to determine whether the invention constituted a patentable computer-related invention (CRI) with genuine technical effect, or merely excluded software. The ruling provides crucial clarity on interpreting CRIs, inventive step, technical contribution, and the boundaries of Section 3(k) in Indian patent law.
On November 4, 2025, the Madras High Court, through Justice Senthilkumar Ramamoorthy, overturned the Patent Office's rejection of Ab Initio Technology LLC's patent application for "Graphic Representations of Data Relationship." The invention, filed in July 2010, presented a novel method for tracking and representing data lineage in complex data systems. After nearly a decade of examination and amendments, the Patent Office rejected it in July 2020 under Section 2(1)(j) for lacking novelty and inventive step, and under Section 3(k) as a "computer programme per se." The Court's intervention was sought to determine whether the invention constituted a patentable computer-related invention (CRI) with genuine technical effect, or merely excluded software. The ruling provides crucial clarity on interpreting CRIs, inventive step, technical contribution, and the boundaries of Section 3(k) in Indian patent law.
Arguments of the Appellant (Ab Initio Technology LLC)
Ab Initio contended that the Patent Office misunderstood the invention's technical scope. The invention introduced a distinctive mechanism for graphically representing data lineage—tracking how data moves, transforms, and interacts within multi-layered environments—which the cited prior art failed to disclose. The company emphasized that its invention delivered technical improvements: faster data query processing, reduced computation time, and enhanced accuracy in tracking data flows. These constituted a "technical effect" aligned with international jurisprudence (EPO and UK precedents) and the Indian Patent Office's own CRI Guidelines, which recognize CRIs as patentable when demonstrating technical contribution, even without novel hardware. Ab Initio argued that the Patent Office mechanically applied Section 3(k) without analyzing the invention's real-world technological impact. Section 3(k) excludes only pure algorithms devoid of application, not inventions using algorithms to deliver tangible, measurable technical results. The unique structure, architecture, and data-mapping logic were non-obvious to persons skilled in the art, satisfying the inventive step requirement under Section 2(1)(j). Ab Initio sought recognition of the invention as a patentable CRI and reversal of the refusal order.
Ab Initio contended that the Patent Office misunderstood the invention's technical scope. The invention introduced a distinctive mechanism for graphically representing data lineage—tracking how data moves, transforms, and interacts within multi-layered environments—which the cited prior art failed to disclose. The company emphasized that its invention delivered technical improvements: faster data query processing, reduced computation time, and enhanced accuracy in tracking data flows. These constituted a "technical effect" aligned with international jurisprudence (EPO and UK precedents) and the Indian Patent Office's own CRI Guidelines, which recognize CRIs as patentable when demonstrating technical contribution, even without novel hardware. Ab Initio argued that the Patent Office mechanically applied Section 3(k) without analyzing the invention's real-world technological impact. Section 3(k) excludes only pure algorithms devoid of application, not inventions using algorithms to deliver tangible, measurable technical results. The unique structure, architecture, and data-mapping logic were non-obvious to persons skilled in the art, satisfying the inventive step requirement under Section 2(1)(j). Ab Initio sought recognition of the invention as a patentable CRI and reversal of the refusal order.
Arguments of the Respondent (Patent Office)
The Patent Office defended its refusal, asserting the claims were fundamentally software executed through standard computing systems, constituting a computer programme per se. The core function—tracking and displaying data relationships—was an abstract computational method lacking novel hardware or technological transformation. Operating entirely within a computer, the invention fell squarely within Section 3(k)'s prohibitions against algorithms, computer programs per se, mathematical methods, and business methods. The Office maintained that Ab Initio's amendments failed to remedy objections because the underlying method remained software-based instructions implementable by any skilled programmer. The invention also lacked inventive step since prior art already disclosed the general concept of graphically representing data relationships. Any improvement was incidental to algorithmic implementation rather than true technical advancement. The refusal order complied with statutory requirements and sound technical reasoning, warranting no judicial interference.
The Patent Office defended its refusal, asserting the claims were fundamentally software executed through standard computing systems, constituting a computer programme per se. The core function—tracking and displaying data relationships—was an abstract computational method lacking novel hardware or technological transformation. Operating entirely within a computer, the invention fell squarely within Section 3(k)'s prohibitions against algorithms, computer programs per se, mathematical methods, and business methods. The Office maintained that Ab Initio's amendments failed to remedy objections because the underlying method remained software-based instructions implementable by any skilled programmer. The invention also lacked inventive step since prior art already disclosed the general concept of graphically representing data relationships. Any improvement was incidental to algorithmic implementation rather than true technical advancement. The refusal order complied with statutory requirements and sound technical reasoning, warranting no judicial interference.
Court's Judgment
The Madras High Court set aside the refusal order after examining the material, arguments, and statutory provisions, delivering detailed analysis on inventive step and CRI patentability. Addressing Section 2(1)(j) requirements (novelty, inventive step, industrial applicability), the Court noted the Patent Office selectively interpreted prior art without acknowledging Ab Initio's distinctive features. The prior art did not disclose the specific data lineage tracking methodology or the graphical representation mechanism capturing complex dependencies and transformations across systems. A person skilled in the art would not naturally derive these features from prior art, affirming inventive step. The invention introduced unique technical architecture enhancing query response speed and accuracy, constituting industrially applicable improvement.
Regarding Section 3(k), the Court provided important clarification on Indian CRI jurisprudence. Mere software involvement does not automatically disqualify patent protection. Section 3(k) excludes only purely abstract inventions consisting solely of computer programs or algorithms, not software-driven inventions achieving concrete technical effects or technical contributions. Ab Initio's invention offered such contribution by improving processing time, enabling efficient data lineage tracking, and providing sophisticated technical solutions to real-world problems. Citing global CRI patentability trends, the Court clarified that Indian law aligns with the principle that novel hardware is not prerequisite for patenting software-driven inventions. The Court stated that "patent applications in relation to a CRI, even de hors novel hardware or impact on the internal working thereof, would not be excluded under Section 3(k) if such CRI makes a technical contribution or has a technical effect." The Patent Office incorrectly applied Section 3(k); the refusal was reversed and the patent application directed to be allowed.
The Madras High Court set aside the refusal order after examining the material, arguments, and statutory provisions, delivering detailed analysis on inventive step and CRI patentability. Addressing Section 2(1)(j) requirements (novelty, inventive step, industrial applicability), the Court noted the Patent Office selectively interpreted prior art without acknowledging Ab Initio's distinctive features. The prior art did not disclose the specific data lineage tracking methodology or the graphical representation mechanism capturing complex dependencies and transformations across systems. A person skilled in the art would not naturally derive these features from prior art, affirming inventive step. The invention introduced unique technical architecture enhancing query response speed and accuracy, constituting industrially applicable improvement.
Regarding Section 3(k), the Court provided important clarification on Indian CRI jurisprudence. Mere software involvement does not automatically disqualify patent protection. Section 3(k) excludes only purely abstract inventions consisting solely of computer programs or algorithms, not software-driven inventions achieving concrete technical effects or technical contributions. Ab Initio's invention offered such contribution by improving processing time, enabling efficient data lineage tracking, and providing sophisticated technical solutions to real-world problems. Citing global CRI patentability trends, the Court clarified that Indian law aligns with the principle that novel hardware is not prerequisite for patenting software-driven inventions. The Court stated that "patent applications in relation to a CRI, even de hors novel hardware or impact on the internal working thereof, would not be excluded under Section 3(k) if such CRI makes a technical contribution or has a technical effect." The Patent Office incorrectly applied Section 3(k); the refusal was reversed and the patent application directed to be allowed.
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