INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW FOR CALIFORNIA CANNABIS AND HEMP COMPANIES
Recognized By

Top 20 California Cannabis Lawyers
The Daily Journal

Global Top 200 Cannabis Lawyer
Cannabis Law Journal
The Federal Trademark Gap and How to Address It
The USPTO’s lawful-use doctrine produces a structural problem for cannabis brands: companies cannot register federal trademarks for their core cannabis products. The standard workaround is the ancillary-goods strategy — federal registration for cannabis-adjacent goods (apparel, accessories, wellness products) that are themselves lawfully sold in interstate commerce. Federal registration on the ancillary goods can support brand protection even without direct registration on the cannabis SKU. The strategy is imperfect, but it is the standard tool of cannabis IP practitioners, and one the firm deploys for clients building multi-state brand presence.
State trademark registration provides the essential additional layer. California’s state trademark system protects marks used in California commerce, which for a California-licensed operator covers all lawfully conducted business activity. State protection does not carry the nationwide constructive notice or federal-court enforcement rights of federal registration, but it establishes priority within California and creates a legal basis for cease-and-desist enforcement against infringing competitors operating in the state.
The firm advises clients to pursue state trademark protection immediately upon launching a brand, without waiting for a favorable change in federal law. Combined with ancillary federal filings, that two-track approach builds an enforceable position from day one.
Trade Secrets in the Cannabis and Hemp Industries
For cannabis companies, trade secret law is often the most durable form of IP protection — covering cultivation techniques, extraction processes, nutrient formulations, breeding programs, and proprietary software. The California Uniform Trade Secrets Act protects information that derives independent economic value from not being generally known and that is the subject of reasonable efforts to maintain secrecy. Courts have confirmed that cannabis trade secrets can include customer lists, vendor pricing, and operational processes.
Protection requires both legal and operational measures. The firm drafts comprehensive non-disclosure agreements, non-solicitation agreements, and IP assignment agreements — and critically, ensures NDA time limitations do not inadvertently allow trade secret protections to expire, a drafting mistake that can permanently destroy trade secret rights. The firm also conducts trade secret audits: identifying, documenting, and classifying protectable information and implementing the access-restriction protocols courts require to establish “reasonable efforts” to maintain secrecy.
Copyright and Additional IP Strategies
Cannabis and hemp companies can also pursue copyright protection for software, marketing materials, photography, and website content. The strongest cannabis IP portfolios are not built on a single strategy — they combine state trademarks, ancillary federal trademarks, trade secrets, copyrights, and (where the invention supports it) patents.
Intellectual property services include:
- IP portfolio assessment and strategy
- California state trademark clearance, prosecution, and registration
- Federal trademark registration for ancillary products and services
- Trade secret identification, documentation, and protection programs
- Non-disclosure, non-solicitation, and IP assignment agreements
- Copyright registration
- Cease-and-desist letters and brand enforcement
- IP licensing agreements for brands, software, and proprietary processes
- IP due diligence in M&A and financings
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Articles
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California cannabis and hemp operators face five active or anticipated rulemakings in 2026 — covering multipack cannabis goods, pesticide residue testing, cultivation requirements, METRC track-and-trace reform, and AB 8 implementation. California cannabis attorney Shay Aaron Gilmore breaks down each DCC rulemaking proceeding, the AB 8 two-year countdown to hemp-DCC licensing integration, and why administrative law counsel delivers its highest value before any enforcement action begins.
California’s 2026 Cannabis Bills: All Active, All in the Assembly, and a Critical Deadline Approaching
Every active 2026 California cannabis bill affecting licensed dispensaries and retailers — including AB 2532’s beverage overhaul — is now sitting in the Assembly Appropriations Committee with a hard May 15 deadline. California cannabis attorney Shay Aaron Gilmore breaks down all of the bills, their current status, who’s sponsoring them, and what operators need to do before the window closes. Read the full legislative update at shaygilmorelaw.com.
California M-License Operators in a Bifurcated Federal World: A Legal Deep Dive on DOJ’s April 2026 Rescheduling Order
The DOJ’s April 22, 2026 order rescheduling medical marijuana to Schedule III is the most significant shift in federal cannabis law in a generation — but it is narrow, legally fragile, and comes with a hard deadline. Here is what California M-license operators and investors need to know right now.
Experienced Intellectual Property Counsel
Brand, technology, and know‑how are often a cannabis or hemp company’s most valuable assets. The firm helps operators, investors, and product developers protect and commercialize their intellectual property in a regulatory environment where federal trademark protection for many THC products remains constrained, while hemp and ancillary offerings may be fully registrable.
Engagements range from strategic advice on brand architecture and trademark portfolios to negotiation of complex IP and distribution agreements for proprietary hardware and formulations. The practice has represented inventors of next‑generation vaporizer technology in nationwide distribution deals, crafting royalty and profit‑sharing structures that capture upside while addressing product‑liability and regulatory risk. It also advises on trade secret protection for cultivation methods, extraction processes, formulations, and SOPs, with appropriate confidentiality, employment, and ownership agreements.
The firm’s IP work is closely integrated with its regulatory and commercial contracting practice: intellectual‑property licenses, white‑label arrangements, and technology collaborations are drafted to address cannabis‑specific issues such as federal illegality, state marketing restrictions, and rapidly evolving product standards.
The Law Office of Shay Aaron Gilmore provides strategic intellectual property counsel to cannabis and hemp companies at all stages of growth, assisting with acquiring, managing, licensing, developing, prosecuting, and defending intellectual property in all forms.
What Intellectual Property Issues Do Cannabis Businesses Face?
From Shay’s interview for the Master’s series on ReelLawyers.com
Intellectual property issues come up frequently for cannabis and hemp businesses, especially around licensing and intellectual property agreements. This includes matters like cross-licensing or determining the value of cannabis-related intellectual property.
These issues can be particularly challenging due to the rapidly evolving market and ongoing legal uncertainties.
The firm provides Intellectual Property Law services to cannabis and hemp operators and investors in:
Focused on Protection of Cannabis and Hemp Intellectual Property
Whether it’s a secret recipe or the company’s brand, ideas can be an enterprise’s most valuable asset. The Law Office of Shay Aaron Gilmore identifies, protects, and defends intellectual property rights for cannabis and hemp companies throughout California. The Law Office of Shay Aaron Gilmore supports clients with the following legal services:
- Preparation of cease and desist letters and responding to them
- Trademark protection and portfolio management
- Evaluation of trademarks, service marks, trade dress, logos and other branding
- Developing strategies to protect trade secrets
- White labeling agreements
- Internet issues including domain names and other media handles
From clearance to registration to cease-and-desist letters, The Law Office of Shay Aaron Gilmore helps businesses identify protectable intellectual property assets and develop a pragmatic approach for protection and value optimization.
- Advised an inventor of a mechanical vaporizer system on a nationwide distribution agreement with a major distributor, including multi‑year royalty and profit‑sharing provisions tied to the rollout of hardware.
- Counseled a hemp and cannabinoid e‑commerce retailer on legislative and regulatory developments affecting online sales, aligning brand and product strategies with emerging state restrictions and opportunities.
In California, cannabis and hemp entrepreneurs have been creating intellectual property for decades. For companies to obtain and sustain a competitive advantage, cannabis and hemp companies must protect their intellectual property, which can range from new methods of growing cannabis to innovative retail software. The Law Office of Shay Aaron Gilmore supports the intellectual property legal services needs of clients with the following:
- Assignment & assumption agreements
- Branding and marketing agreements
- Copyright protection and enforcement
- Intellectual property licensing agreements
- Trademark registration
- Commercial Contracts
- Corporate Law
- Venture Capital Counsel
- Regulatory Compliance
- Real Estate & Land Use
- Administrative Law
- Employment & Labor Law
Explore Our Intellectual Property Law Services
The Law Office of Shay Aaron Gilmore provides in-depth legal services across all dimensions of cannabis and Intellectual Property Law in California:
Build the IP Portfolio Federal Law Still Allows
Cannabis IP protection requires a strategy that federal law has shaped, not one that defaults to federal registration. A scoped portfolio review identifies the strongest protection available for your brand and your proprietary processes — under current law.

