Tag Archives: Trademark

Apple’s use of “iBooks” isn’t trademark infringement, says court

Apple began using the term “iBook” quite a few years ago, having applied it to various computers in days-gone-by that are now obsolete, only recently shifting to a slight variation of the word for its digital books app. Such a change prompted John T. Colby, a New York publisher, to file a lawsuit against Apple

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SlashGear

Facebook gets to keep its 'Timeline' following trademark settlement

Facebook has reached an agreement with the company Timelines Inc. to settle a trademark infringement lawsuit over the social network's use of the name Timeline.
Computerworld News

Facebook to go to trial over “Timeline” trademark

Amidst all of the good news Facebook has been throwing out, it looks like some bad news was just waiting to rain on its parade. Facebook was sued back in September 2011 by Timelines Inc. over the “timeline” trademark. Timelines Inc., which launched its website in 2009, claimed that Facebook infringed on its trademark when

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SlashGear

U.S. patent office rebuffs Apple’s iPad Mini trademark request

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has provisionally denied Apple’s trademark application for “iPad Mini” because the term is “merely descriptive” of the tablet’s size.
Computerworld News

Apple gets denied the iPad Mini trademark

Apple has been denied the trademark for its iPad Mini devices in the U.S. The United States Patent and Trademark Office denied Apple’s application because it says that the word “Mini” is “merely descriptive” of Apple’s iPad. The reviewer of the application stated, “the applied-for mark merely describes a feature or characteristic of the applicant’s

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Report: US Patent And Trademark Office Denies Apple’s iPad Mini Trademark Application, Deemed “Merely Descriptive”

ipad-with-ipad-miniRight after it launched the iPad mini, Apple filed a trademark application for the name with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). As Patently Apple noticed earlier today, however, the USPTO will likely refuse Apple’s trademark filing because, the reviewer argues, “the applied-for mark merely describes a feature or characteristic of applicant’s goods.” The letter was mailed to Apple on January 24, but only made public in the last few days. Apple can still respond to this notice and correct its application, though it’s hard to see how Apple could argue against the USPTO’s argument that ‘mini’ is ‘merely descriptive.’ “The applied-for mark merely describes a feature or characteristic of applicant’s goods.” The word ‘mini,’ the reviewer argues, just describes that the iPad mini is indeed “a small sized handheld tablet computer” and just describes the mini’s features. It is not, the reviewing attorney says, “a unitary mark with a unique, incongruous, or otherwise nondescriptive meaning in relation to the goods and/or services.” The USPTO would only grant Apple the trademark to the full iPad mini name if the company could show that the word ‘mini’ has now acquired a “distinctiveness.” In addition, Patently Apple also notes, the reviewer also denied the application for now because Apple should have provided the USPTO with a specimen other than its own product website, even though Apple always uses these for its trademark applications and this was never a reason for a denial before. The reviewer also believes that there is a “likelihood of confusion” between Apple’s existing iPad trademarks and this new iPad® mini application, which, to be honest, doesn’t make a lot of sense. Here is the letter the USPTO sent to Apple in January: USPTO Refuses Apple’s iPad mini Trademark Application
TechCrunch

ICANN’s Trademark Clearinghouse Launching Today

itwbennett writes “If you want to protect your brand before ICANN roles out the new gTLDs (generic top-level domains), here’s your chance. The clearinghouse will allow trademark owners to register their marks for an annual fee of between $ 95 and $ 150. The clearinghouse ‘doesn’t necessarily prevent trademark infringement or cybersquatting, but it does help trademark owners and brand owners somewhat in mitigating the damage that might occur,’ said Keith Kupferschmid, general counsel and vice president of IP policy and enforcement for the Software and Information Industry Association (SIIA). ‘We’ve been telling brand owners it’s not that expensive to protect themselves and they ought to do it.’” All of the new TLD registrars will be required to check the trademark clearinghouse before issuing domains, preemptively squashing trademark disputes.

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ICANN's trademark clearinghouse to launch Tuesday

As the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers launches a new trademark clearinghouse on Tuesday, businesses that own trademarks should consider getting involved in the program, some ICANN watchers said.
Computerworld News

Apple’s claim to iPhone trademark in Mexico gets a nail in the appeals coffin

Apple's claim to iPhone trademark in Mexico gets a nail in the appeals coffin

Apple’s already lost hope for exclusive rights to the name “iPhone” in Brazil, and now it’s been defeated in another battle south of the border. Cupertino and Mexican company iFone S.A. have a long history, stretching back to 2009 when Apple tried to have the firm’s “iFone” trademark revoked. The electronics giant claimed that the mark had expired since it was registered in 2003. However, the Wall Street Journal reports that a Mexican federal court ruled last year that the small company’s claim to the name was valid, and that Cook and Co. can’t make it their own. Now, Mexico’s Supreme Court has put another nail in the coffin, upholding the previous decision. iFone intends to seek some coin in the form of damages, but all is not lost for Apple: it still has two trademarks to the iPhone moniker in the country and can keep selling its hardware.

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Via: The Verge

Source: Wall Street Journal, CNN Expansión (translated)

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Apple may be close to resolving Brazilian iPhone trademark fight

Apple and Brazil’s IGB Eletronica have reportedly agreed to settle their legal battle over the iPhone name, says a Brazilian news site. [Read more]


CNET News

Debian Allows Trademark Use For Commercial Activities

sfcrazy writes “According to the new trademark policy, Debian logos and marks may now be used freely for both non-commercial and commercial purposes. Stefano Zacchiroli, current Debian Project Leader and one of the main promoters of the new trademark policy, said ‘Software freedoms and trademarks are a difficult match. We all want to see well-known project names used to promote free software, but we cannot risk they will be abused to trick users into downloading proprietary spyware. With the help of SPI and SFLC, we have struck a good balance in our new trademark policy. Among other positive things, it allows all sorts of commercial use; we only recommend clearly informing customers about how much of the sale price will be donated to Debian.’”

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Python Trademark Filer Ignorant of Python?

WebMink writes “Is it possible that the CEO of the company that’s trying to file a trademark on ‘Python’ was unaware of Python’s importance as a programming technology? That’s what he claims — despite running a hosting company that’s trying to break into cloud computing, where Python is used extensively. Still, he also regards the Python Software Foundation as a hostile American company and thinks that getting attention from half the world’s geeks is a DDoS. From the article: ‘[The CEO, Tim Poultney,] confirmed that he’d not involved any technical staff in the decisions he’d made about the Python product brand, and told me he regretted that as it would probably have helped him understand the likely reaction to his trademark challenge. … He said he now understood how offended the global developer community are and told me there was obviously only one outcome that was now possible.’”

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Apple Loses iPhone Trademark Exclusivity In Brazil As Regulator Delivers Its Ruling

gradiente-iphoneApple has officially lost exclusive rights over the use of the iPhone trademark in Brazil, according to the BBC. The news was telegraphed earlier via a leak that said Brazil’s regulatory body was planning to side with IGB Electronics S.A. in the case and revoke Apple’s exclusive ownership of the term “iPhone” as it relates to electronic devices.
TechCrunch

Apple loses iPhone trademark in Brazil, to a company that makes Android phones

Apple loses iPhone trademark in Brazil, to a company that makes Android phones

Ouch. We had an inkling this might happen, but now it’s official: the Brazilian authorities have just ruled in favor of a small handset manufacturer called Gradiente Eletronica in its trademark tussle with Apple. Gradiente registered the name “iphone” in 2000, seven years before Cupertino set up shop in that country, so now it has the right to continue using the word on its devices — including the Android-powered iphone Neo One. The BBC reports that Apple is likely to appeal the decision, but if that fails there’s always, ahem, the other option.

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Source: BBC

Engadget

EFF Moves To Nix Trademark On “Gaymer”

netbuzz writes “Spurred by the mark holder’s cease and desist letter to Reddit’s subreddit r/gaymer, the Electronic Frontier Foundation today officially petitioned the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to rescind its grant of a trademark registration on the word “gaymer”. ‘This registration should never have been granted,’ said EFF Intellectual Property Director Corynne McSherry. ‘Gaymer is a common term that refers to members of this vibrant gaming community, and we are happy to help them fight back and make sure the term goes back to the public domain where it belongs.’”

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Slashdot

Reddit 'gaymer' group fights back against trademark

A group of Reddit users are arguing in a petition filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office that the use of the term "gaymer" to identify their community on the site should remain in the public domain.
Computerworld News

No, We Were Not Trying To Trademark Rumor Sunday! ®

Screen Shot 2013-01-06 at 7.06.51 PMYou know, I love Aol. I seriously do. The company has some stellar health and dental benefits and they brought Mike and MG back and there are definitely some individuals who work there that go above and beyond what’s necessary in being thoughtful, generous and helpful (hello Trisha Dearborn, you saint you!).

It is also pretty great to have someone, anyone, pay you to write about technology when you are obsessed with technology, and for that I am forever grateful: Don’t tell Jay Kirsch, but I would probably do this job for free if I could make sure I’d have a roof over my head and ample feta cheese on my plate while doing so. Okay, not really.
TechCrunch

China to curtail trademark trolls

China says it will make a greater effort to stamp out companies such as Proview, which sued Apple earlier this year for the use of the iPad name. [Read more]


CNET News

Apple acquires use of Lightning trademark in Europe from Harley

iPhone maker secures a partial transfer for the term it uses to describe its new device connector, according to the EU’s Trade Mark and Design Office. [Read more]


CNET News

It’s Oatmeal vs. Oatmeal in a new trademark suit

Ding ding, round two. Internet comic The Oatmeal is being sued by a greeting-card shop owner who claims the comic’s name infringes its Oatmeal Studios trademark. [Read more]


CNET News

Online Legal Services Company LegalZoom Sues Rival RocketLawyer For Misleading Advertising, Trademark Infringement And More

_rocktThis is going to get ugly. Online legal services company LegalZoom is suing rival Rocket Lawyer, according to a release issued by the LA-based LegalZoom today. The charges are false and misleading advertising, trademark infringement and unfair competition. The suit was filed in the United States District Court for the Central District of California.
TechCrunch

Author Threatens To Sue Book Reviewers Over Trademark Infringement



Nate the greatest writes “Do you know what is crazier than sending DMCA notices to a site like Lendink which doesn’t host any content? It’s when an author threatens to sue book reviewers over trademarks. Jazan Wild, a comics creator, is sending out threatening emails to any and all book blogs who review a recently published book called Carnival of Souls. The book was written by Melissa Marr, and it happens to use a title which Jazan Wild owns the registered trademark. He’s also suing the publisher for trademark infringement, but HarperCollins is laughing it off. The book blog Bookalicious posted the email they got from Jazan. Needless to say they did not take down the review.”

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Slashdot

New Kindle shows up at FCC, Amazon acquires ‘Firedock’ trademark

Last week, we caught word that a new Kindle Fire had apparently cleared the FCC. Today The Digital Reader has uncovered another Kindle device that has passed through the FCC, but whereas the device from last week appeared the be the next iteration of the Kindle Fire, this one seems to have more in common

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SlashGear

Hey Amazon, What Are You Doing With The ‘Firedock’ Trademark?

firedockFor most geeks, uttering the word “Firedock” conjures up images of this Kindle Fire-friendly speaker dock that was announced back in March.

But something interesting happened last month — Grace Digital released that very same Kindle Fire speaker dock under a different name on July 17. That by itself isn’t much to write home about, but The Digital Reader points out that Amazon now owns the FireDock trademark. A little digging reveals that Grace Digital transferred the trademark to Amazon Technologies (an Amazon.com subsidiary based in Nevada) just a few days earlier, on July 11.

So what gives? What is the Firedock?
TechCrunch

Apple pays $60M for iPad trademark in China

Apple has agreed to pay $ 60 million for ownership of the iPad trademark in China, as part of a settlement with a little-known Chinese firm called Proview that had tried to ban sales of the tablet in the country, according to a local court.
Computerworld News

Apple pays Proview $60m for iPad trademark

Apple has settled its iPad trademark suit with Proview, agreeing to a $ 60m pay-out in order to use the iPad name for its tablet in China. “The iPad dispute resolution is ended,” the Guangdong High People’s Court confirmed in a statement. “Apple Inc. has transferred $ 60m to the account of the Guangdong High Court as requested

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SlashGear

Apple settles iPad trademark dispute in China for $60M

Apple had previously accused Proview of tricking it into signing a contract that would raise questions about the trademark’s rightful owner.
[Read more]
CNET News

RIM wins court ruling over BBM trademark

Handset maker free to use acronym because it does not compete in the same industry with BBM Canada, which has long owned the trademark.
[Read more]
CNET News

Apple could lose iPad trademark, Chinese official warns

Apple Inc. risks losing the right to use the iPad trademark in China, a senior official suggested Tuesday, as a Chinese court was seeking to mediate a settlement between the technology giant and a local company challenging its use of the iPad name.




FOXNews.com

Apple in talks with iPad trademark challenger to try and settle dispute

Apple and a Chinese company have started talks to try and resolve an ongoing legal dispute over the iPad trademark, according to a lawyer involved in the case.
Computerworld News

Google finally grabs Gmail domain and trademark in Germany: users can drop the ‘oogle’

Image

Google has offered its email client to willing Germans since 2005, however the typical Gmail domain had already been snapped up by a local businessman in Germany and the company had to plump for the longer googlemail.de addresses. Now, according to the Financial Times, both the Gmail trademark and domain were transferred across to Google earlier this month, although there are no specifics as to how much money changed hands in the deal. With that minor issue sorted, Google packs its backs for its next destination — maybe it should try Iran.

Google finally grabs Gmail domain and trademark in Germany: users can drop the ‘oogle’ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Apr 2012 15:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceFinancial Times Germany (translated)  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Google settles Gmail trademark dispute

Google has obtained control of the Gmail trademark in Germany, according to the German trademark office, and the legal battle for the related domain name is also over, according to Google.
Computerworld News

Google Finally Gets Right To Gmail Trademark In Germany

gmail-de-logoWhen Google launched Gmail in Germany in 2005, it was quickly barred from using the Gmail name for its email product there. German entrepreneur Daniel Giersch, after all, had registered the ‘G-mail’ trademark (short for Giersch mail) for his physical and electronic mail service in Germany in 2000, long before Google had even announced its own service. Instead of ‘Gmail,’ German Internet users who wanted to use Gmail had to go to googlemail.com. Google tried to appeal this decision, but ran out of legal options in 2007, after Europe’s Office for Harmonization in the Internal Market rejected its appeal. For a long time, it seemed like that was the end of the story, but last week Google quietly settled its dispute with Giersch. According to Germany’s GoogleWatchBlog, the gmail.de domain and the Gmail trademark were transferred to Google on April 13.
TechCrunch

Chinese iPad Trademark Battle Hits California Court



judgecorp writes “The Chinese company Proview is taking its trademark case against Apple’s iPad to the Californian Courts. The company acknowledges it sold the IPAD name to Apple, but denies Apple has rights in China, and has accused Apple of underhand tactics.” Says the article: “Any kind of ban in China would obviously be a major headache for Apple, since that is where most of the iPads are manufactured. If Proview is successful, it would effectively stop worldwide distribution of the tablet, and delay the launch of the iPad 3.”

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Slashdot

Apple’s iPad trademark battle comes to US from China

Proview Electronics has brought its legal battle against Apple to the U.S., accusing the company of using deceptive practices to acquire the iPad trademark.
Computerworld News

Apple pulls iPads from Amazon in China following trademark battle

Apple asked Amazon.com to remove iPads from sale on its Chinese website, according to people familiar with the matter, marking the latest twist in an ongoing legal battle over the iPad name in the country.




FOXNews.com

Might Apple lose the iPad trademark? Welcome to the Twilight Zone

It seems improbable, but a struggling Chinese monitor maker is working the system to regain one of the world’s best-known trademarks.
[Read more]
CNET News

Apple could face U.S. lawsuit related to iPad trademark dispute in China

A trademark dispute in China over the iPad could spill over into U.S courts, after a little-known Chinese company threatened on Friday to sue Apple in the U.S. for among other things allegedly setting up a "fake company" to purchase the rights to the trademark.
Computerworld News

Chinese public divided on iPad trademark dispute

Ordinary Chinese people are taking sides in the iPad trademark battle between Apple and local display vendor Proview, with some thinking the U.S. tech giant should simply change the name of its iconic tablet.
Computerworld News

Samsung grabs trademark for Samsung Galaxy Sleek

Samsung has field for a new trademark that hints at a new line of smartphones and tablets that may be coming to market reports Fusible. Granted simply filing for a trademark isn’t a guarantee that a new product is coming to market. The trademark that Samsung grabbed is for Samsung Galaxy Sleek. We can imagine [...]
SlashGear

Schools Buy .xxx Domains In Trademark Panic



bs0d3 writes “Schools nationwide, including The University of Missouri and Washington University, are snapping up .xxx domain names to avoid people making porn sites with their names in the url. The new .xxx domain will be launched later this year, and before that, everyone with a trademark will have the opportunity to reserve names during what’s called a “sunrise period”. Someone is promoting the possible horrors of what could happen as a way to sell these domains, which cost up to $ 200 dollars per domain per year. Even though these schools may already be protected from defamation and trademark infringement, they still feel compelled to buy these names.”

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Slashdot

Twitter secures trademark for ‘tweet,’ report says

Microblogging site agrees to drop lawsuit challenging Twittad’s trademark and restore its Twitter account in exchange for the trademark, The Wall Street Journal reports.
CNET News.com

Facebook’s Faces Trademark Suit Over Timeline

sydneyhype writes “Facebook’s recently announced Timeline feature is up against legal action from an online social-scrapbooking company that has been in business since 2008. The company, Timelines.com, filed a trademark-infringement suit yesterday against Facebook, claiming it is to prevent being ‘rolled over and quite possibly eliminated by the unlawful action by the world’s largest and most powerful social-media company, Facebook.’”

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Slashdot

Trademark Watch: Windows Phone 7.5 Will “Put People First”

windowsphoneMicrosoft has filed for a trademark on “Put People First”, the tagline it has recently attached to the imminent Windows Phone 7.5 update (often referred to as ‘Mango’), which is expected to roll out this or next week.

The tagline has thus far appeared on Microsoft’s Windows Phone Facebook page and in promotional YouTube videos (see below). By filing for a trademark on the slogan, Microsoft aims to demonstrate its commitment to making the next version of the Windows Phone operating system people-centric.
TechCrunch