Web Ad Trademark Law To Be Retested 331
scubacuda writes "News.com et al report that The Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals on Wednesday found Playboy Enterprises can pursue charges that Excite and Netscape Communications violated its trademark by selling banner advertisements triggered by the terms 'playboy' and 'playmate.' The decision reverses a district court ruling that dismissed the suit without a trial in 2000. Playboy 'clearly holds the marks in question, and defendants used the marks in commerce without (its) permission,' a split three-judge panel wrote in its majority decision." This is a shame, because the first judge to look at this case seems to have pretty much gotten it right: "Although the trademark terms and the English language words are undisputedly identical, which, presumably, leads plaintiff to believe that the use of the English words is akin to use of the trademarks, the holder of a trademark may not remove a word from the English language merely by acquiring trademark rights in it."
IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:5, Insightful)
Trademark law is based on likelihood of confusion. I don't agree, and the courts won't either, that Playboy can stop all uses of these terms. But I think it's justified here, where someone is using a company's trademark to sell related but non-affiliated goods. This isn't a case of the search results including related goods; here the website brings up a paid-for banner advertisement: "Some consumers, initially seeking Playboy's sites, may initially believe that unlabeled banner advertisements are links to Playboy's sites...Once they follow the instructions to 'click here,' and they access the site, they may well realize that they are not at a Playboy-sponsored site."
I agree that most intellectual property law is subject to abuse (see, e.g., RIAA), but that does not automatically equal the proposition that it is all bad or immoral.Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:4, Insightful)
If the non-Playboy site has a clearly differnet name, and there's no reasonable possibility of confusion?
For a different take--if a business named themsleves P-something, and took out a large ad in the "adult entertainment" directory that just happened to be on the same page as Playboy's--how would this be trademark infringement?
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
In all fairness to your example, if someone is looking in the "adult entertainment" directory and they see a business named P-something, they will most certainly think it refers to something entirely separate from Playboy and they damn well doesn't have a monopoly on that!
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:4, Interesting)
What's next? Will this affect indexing?
Can a porn site no longer use the phrase "Playboy(TM)" (including the "TM") anywhere on their site, because it might get indexed and lead clueless/illiterate googlers there, when they were actually looking for the site of "Playboy(TM) Magazine"?
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:4, Insightful)
It reminds me roadside markets I've seen set up with lots of knock-off athletic shoes, and a guy standing out front with a hand-written sign that reads in huge letters "NIKE", with small text underneath that says "-style shoes". Since they're set up and taken down in a couple days, nothing happens, but I'm sure Nike could win an infringement case against such tactics.
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
This is interesting. What will they say if porn site X, which has the text "better looking than playmates" in their title, which will appear in the search results summary, also comes up for the playmate search? It is also effectively an advertisment for their commercial service. Does Yahoo (or any other search engine) have to filter or modify what's presented for their search results?
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:3, Insightful)
Is trademark infringement using similar verbage for similar concepts or for identical usage?
If someone uses the word "playmate" in the context of porn, but without the Playboy style, is it still infringment? After all, someone could easily pull fetish or word play connotations from the word "playmate" that are not present in Playboy's usage of the word. Is that infringm
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:4, Interesting)
Additionally, I disagree with the comments by the main poster. Even though the initial decision is being overturned, I don't think the 9th circuit is disagreeing with the statement: "English words is akin to use of the trademarks, the holder of a trademark may not remove a word from the English language merely by acquiring trademark rights in it."
I think what the 9th circuit is saying is that if you use english words that are obviously trademarks in order to mislead and confuse a consumer (especially into purchasing a different product) then that goes beyond the rights granted of just using English words. (i.e. You can yell "fire" at home, in your backyard, whatever. Freedom of speech. But if you yell "fire" in a movietheater then you're liable if anyone gets injured. It's circumstantial.)
I think the article sums up the point here: "In Playboy's case, it charged Excite with trademark infringement when it sold banner ads to adult-related sites keyed to the terms "playboy" and "playmate," arguing that it created consumer confusion and diluted its trademarked names."
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
That depends. If the ads were sold as 'what will come up when somebody types in 'playboy' or 'playmate,' that's wrong.
If the ads were sold as 'what will come up when people are looking for porn,' and typing in 'hustler' or 'penthouse' would wind up at the same place, that's different.
A Google type system, which reflects how users respond to given keywords, is different. Might also be useful to tell when a trademark's too diluted to remain in force, too. :-)
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
So how much do you bet that Playboy will try to stack the jury with young males, and bring in Ms. December to act as assistant counsel?
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:3, Interesting)
In the Lindows.com case, Microsoft has somehow trademarked the word "windows" in a category in which the term has a generic meaning, and Lindows.com may be able to win. Even Microsoft is not attempting to claim that the trademark "windows" is defensible outside of the computer category - a searc
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, one has to question the strength of these trademarks. The English-language words "playboy" and "playmate" have changed very significantly over the past 50 years -- moving to parallel the trademarks -- so it could be argued that the situation is similar to "Hoov
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
Well, that sucks... or blows... depending on how you look at it.
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
What if they're searching for former Playboy Playmates, like Teri Weigel? [lukeford.com]
BTW, have a look at the link. Playboy has a history of defending their trademarks, no matter who it is that they believe is infringing upon them.
LK
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
Most people I know. Then again, who the hell calls a tissue a Kleenex? A photocopy a Xerox? Never heard the latter two used, except once in Calvin and Hobbes where it confused me...
Don't use the trademark... (Score:3, Interesting)
Then see if they really want to keep suing over this.
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
The ads are based on the type of search performed and the most frequently followed results. A search for "playmate" is most likely used for looking up adult material.
The topic associated most with terms like "playmate" or "playboy" is most often adult material. Any search terms related to adult material should result in ads for adult material regardless if they are trad
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:5, Insightful)
When you are looking at magazine covers and you see something titled "Playboy" that isn't the real thing, then the magazine itself has lied to you, misrepresenting itself. That's trademark infringement.
If you ask someone to get you a Playboy and he comes back with "Doctor Dobbs Swimsuit Issue" then your resulting anger is a matter between you and your him. DDJ didn't infringe a trademark, and more importantly, the guy who brought it to you, didn't infringe either. He just disappointed you (unless you like reading articles about how to use Java to see through women's clothing).
If you hired someone to bring you a Playboy and he brought you something else, then that might be fraud. But it still wouldn't be trademark infringement.
I think that using a search engine (especially a free one) is more like a stranger bringing you the wrong thing. The search engine owes its users nothing, so it's not fraud. And they're not saying, "Here's Playboy"; they're saying, "Here's something you might be interested in." That's a subjective judgement call.
I really hope Playboy loses this one. I don't want to open the door to search engines suddenly being under a bunch of restrictions and the obligation to always provide exactly the right thing. That will kill them. And just to put it in another light: when you search on "Scientology" do you want search engines to only be able to provide links to sites owned by that *cough* church? Aha, got you there.
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
You're missing the point, which is that these are paid banners, not search results. This has absolutely nothing to do with what results a search engine can provide (like your Scientology example); it has to do with what advertizements they can sell based on certain words.
They aren't just saying, "here's something you might be interested in", but "here's something we've been paid to show you in association with a trademarked keyword".
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2, Interesting)
I bring a DDJ containing the articles "Which programming language is the most erotic?" and "How to clean mysterious goo off your keyboard." And I didn't bring a Playboy. Have I infringed Playboy's trademark?
What if I bring you back
easy. (Score:2)
a banner ad pops up for a non-Playboy adult-oriented site, how is that not trademark infringement?
Playboy's tradmark involves a goofey rabbit and typeface. Tell me how my search engine is supposed to know the difference between that and the common word.
If I own a titty bar, am I violating tradmark if I order my barker to say, "Playboys come this way"? What's the difference between that and adwords? Isn't that the association that drove Heffner to chose the word for his magazine in the first
Easy answer: Censorship (Score:2)
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Playmate \Play"mate`\, n.
A companion in diversions; a playfellow.
Obviously, the only effective solution to this problem is to simply outlaw use of the word "playmate" in the context of people who are not wearing clothes.
This is, after all, what Playboy wants, with the stipulation that Playboy Enterprises is the only entity authorized by the US government to u
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:4, Informative)
But what they failed to notice is that Freecraft was using that word pattern, established through the marketing dollars of Blizzard, in the promotion of its own product which was a direct competitor to Blizzard's products.
The parent post is right, the spirit of trademark law is to prevent piggybacking on established product names by competitors. "Freecraft" was against that spirit. So is hijacking "Playboy" and "Playmate" to benefit Playboy's competitors. Whether these things are against the letter of the law is up to the courts to decide, but we shouldn't hide unethical behavior behind the letter of the law when we lambast Microsoft, RIAA, etc for doing the same thing.
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2, Insightful)
If publish a porn magazine called "Plaeboy" or "Playboi" then your comparison with the Warcraft/Freecraft situation is a good one.
But programming a computer to spit out "wrong" results in response to a user's query, is a totally different situation.
You are mistaken about the purpose of trademarks. (Score:2)
They never USE playboy's trademark (Score:2)
The better question is where did they use playboy's trademark? Someone types "playboy" into a search engine. Yes, I realize that this is playboy's trademark. However, the information (ads, whatever) that I return does NOT have playboy's trademark, or use it in any way.
Effectively what playboy wants is a stiflimg of speech, in the sense that whenever a visitor to my site inputs "playboy," I can't return...anything related to adult material at all. Effectively, I c
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
Playboy is merely fighting to keep the competition down.
Ultimately I'd hate to see the Playboy trademark striken down on the basis that it is a word in the English language and I'm pretty sure that the word "playboy" predates the trademark "Playboy."
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2)
Sure, fine, trademark and all that.
First off, wheter Hugh likes it or not (I bet he does) the words Playboy and Playmate have become common words to mean the norm in what they represent. Brand names like Asperine and Coke have become just so. Do you see them suing search engines?
Whatya think search engines will do anyway, when they loose this battle? Maybe they will scrap the word from the dictonary ALLTOGETHER eh? How smart! Pyrric vitory a-la lettre, je pense.
Hampster! All o
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:3, Interesting)
If someone went to a newsstand and asked for _Playboy_, and the clerk silently handed him _Hustler_ instead, it may be poor customer service and lousy supply-chain relations, but is it trademark infringement?
If a telephone book publisher puts competing businesses on the sa
Re:IMHO, but I must admit IAAL (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Not quite (Score:2, Interesting)
According to webster -
playmate - a companion in play
playboy - a man who lives a life devoted chiefly to the pursuit of pleasure
Neither of these words are synonymous or nearly so with naked women, sex, party jokes or anything else Playboy (the magazine) puslishes as magazine content. As I understand it Playboy came out in the late 40's/early 50's. So IYHO, prior to that (WW2, Great Depression, and back) Amer
Re:Not quite (Score:2, Insightful)
Tell that to Ford - a motor company that's named after a shallow river crossing. Or one of their major rivals, General Motors, which has a purely descriptive name. Come to think of it, most brand names are in common usage. Try calling a movie studio Universal.
A company should not be allowed to appropriate a name in an industry where the name is synonymous or n
Re:Not quite (Score:3, Informative)
And all this time I thought it was named for the company founder Henry Ford. Learn something new everyday.
Re:Not quite (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Not quite (Score:4, Informative)
In the quick research I just did - they are over turned about 30% more than any other circuit in the US. Heck - they even overturn themselves. First the CA recall is off, then its on...
Life is always entertaining out here on the Left Coast!
Key term here is "TRADE" (Score:2)
Wait a minute... (Score:4, Insightful)
That seems a little hypocritical to me.
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:2)
In comparison, how often do you use the term 'playboy' or 'playmate' in the context of adult material (pr0n), and NOT mean it in the capitalized (Playboy), trade-marked sense?
That's the difference between this case and the gripes people have about Windows as a trademark: the usage of the terms in context.Re:Wait a minute... (Score:2)
Google would need to allow "playmate" in adWords not related to porn (or insulated food containers), but within porn related ads, could allow it for people searching for sexual playmates, but not to advertize a general "men's entertainment" site.
Now... things get more complicated if you want to use "igloo playmate" to search the internet. Playboy might offer you naked
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:4, Insightful)
You need to check a dictionary. The word you are looking for is "inconsistent".
Anyway I (and the courts) think the two cases are different. Windows is (and was) a general term within GUI applications long before Bill registered Windows(tm). In contrast, Playboy (and Playmate) were not associated with Porn' before Hugh Hefner did his job.
The first court patently got it wrong, the second one got it right. The system's working.
Nuts. (Score:2)
This is actually up to debate...Windows was registered in 1983 when personal computers were still in infancy. You would have to provide concrete evidence that the term was common before then which is not easy.
Nuts. Look, for one example, at Smalltalk-80, published in 1980 and writen / developed in to 1970s. Lots of copies of the book still exist, as do conference proceedings, etc. It only seems hard to prove if the web is your only research tool. The term was in common use in the mainfraim / mini wo
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:2)
Playboy (Score:5, Funny)
I guess I'd better start watching which words I use for fear of lawsuits. Come on up to my... ahem... apartment-or-suite-on-the-top-floor and we can discuss it.
Re:Playboy (Score:3, Interesting)
If you want Playboy content, you must go to the proper places where Playboy content is sold... Excite and Google are not such places
It's pretty shocking what some firms will do. (Score:5, Interesting)
Why the hell did Google let Debenhams brazenly advertise under their competitor's name?
Re:It's pretty shocking what some firms will do. (Score:2)
Google ads are exactly that...ads. And they are distinctly marked as that. Paid ads do NOT show up in the search results. So when you search for Jenners, you get Jenners department store. On the side, you get their competition because they paid to have themselves displayed as competition. But you don't have them in the search results. Compared to some other search engines, I'd say this is a commendable thing. Google has to make money somehow, and they are doing it in a way
shocking? (Score:2)
Well, that's what this whole thing is about, isn't it? And what is Google's responsibility here? They shouldn't have to concern themselves with what names might or might not belong to competitors unless the law instructs them to.
Besides, what guidelines would they follow? If a company's proposed search term was trademarked? Like an earlier post mentioned, would a toy company not be allowed to use the search term "
Re:It's pretty shocking what some firms will do. (Score:2)
Google AdWords (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Google AdWords (Score:2)
If someone searches for "Diebold", for example, you shouldn't be able to advertise "Click here for voting machines" and not be Diebold yourself. But you should be able to advertise "Diebold and a history of voting fraud" since you aren't selling anything that could be confused for a voting m
Re:Google AdWords (Score:2)
Keep in mind that Google, not interested in fighting legal battles, will generally comply with complaints.
Even if the complaint has no legal merit, they'll do the removal.
Re:Google AdWords (Score:2)
9th Circuit famous for bad decisions (Score:5, Informative)
Smart Tags (Score:2)
Maybe not (Score:2)
Trademark cannot be used to quiete discussion and commentary (see Mattel v. MCA records). But, this case is possibly on the line and it is good that an appeals court will write a decision that will become usable for other courts.
With all due respect to /. bias (Score:5, Insightful)
"Linux" is TM to Linus Torvalds. The poster who thinks these judges decision is a "shame". I wonder if "Linux" were being used to drive search engine clients to Microsoft, Open/Free/NetBSD or whomever, would the politically correct (/.) views be different?
And who's to say that the Judge who "got it right" the first time had a decent understanding of the issues, or didn't have an axe to grind vs the pornography industry. Possibly she can't see the TM on the pages the way it would appear if it were used in a print-advertisement, and ruled accordingly, while anyone understanding that 'content' now exists in code that's not visible.
So it's pretty clear to me that yes PEI has a pretty good case here, that Excite, Netscape and their clients were profiting on PEI's TM's and that the use was commercial (i.e. it's much less of a free-speech issue - *yes* the rules for commercial speech are different). The article wasn't all that clear but it seems that all of this came about because Google was pro-actively seeking a judgement on it's own approach to TM's in search/advertising. Again no surprise here that Google would follow the letter of the law while Excite & Netscape would use a sleaze approach to gain revenues.
Re:With all due respect to /. bias (Score:2)
no respect (Score:2, Flamebait)
No, dumbfuck and I'll go even further. I don't think Linus would have a problem if Microsoft used the keyword "Linux" in thier web pages about TCO. That's all "adwords" are. Words that actually existed before the company are even more repulsive targets
A more reasonable question... (Score:2)
Re:With all due respect to /. bias (Score:2)
(This turns out not really to be the case, although the tenth link does point to some porn linkage site in Romania.)
This is just the tip of the iceberg ... (Score:3, Insightful)
It's only a matter of time before Playboy goes after them, too. So they should start introducing a new term now. Of course, it might be difficult to find a word (even a made-up word) that isn't already registered as a trademark.
Of course, we should have known that the world had gone utterly insane when a court accepted Fox's suit against Al Franken over the phrase "fair and balanced". You might argue that Al won this one. But consider the implications of the fact that it even got into the courtroom, and the judge didn't just laugh and fine Fox for a frivolous filing.
Bankrupting via court costs has indeed become a business plan.
Re:This is just the tip of the iceberg ... (Score:2)
Hence, your ex
Re:This is just the tip of the iceberg ... (Score:2)
"To be more specific, the use of a trademark in connection with the sale of a good constitutes infringement if it is likely to cause consumer confusion as to the source of those goods or as to the sponsorship or approval of such goods. In deciding whether consumers are likely to be confused, the courts will typically look to a number of factors, including: (1) the strength of the mark; (2) the proximity of the goods; (3) the similarity of
Come on now... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Come on now... (Score:2)
Nope... you got it wrong. These people are not selling a magazine called "Our Playboy" or anything that directly infringes. They are using the term to target people interested in that term.... Remember, these words are not being displayed to humans per se, but to MACHINES that index.
It's more like when a marketer targets BMW owners in order to sell expensive car products. Perfectly legal !@!!!
Re:Come on now... (Score:2)
It's the selling of banner ads - profiting from the trademark - that I take issue with. I certainly don't think they shoul
Re:Come on now... (Score:2)
I'm sure that confusion is what makes it sooo much fun for the companies and soooo profitable for the lawyers. Yuck.
By the way...
666 - The Number of the Beast
664 - The bloke next door.
Re:Come on now... (Score:2)
Yes, but 666607 is as close as I could get being this late to join the fun, Mr. 256924!
Re:Come on now... (Score:2)
Re:Come on now... (Score:2)
Problem with that is when you run into trademarked words that are generic in meaning within a particular industry. Playboy for instance. Webster says the definition of "playboy" is:
a man who lives a life devoted chiefly to the pursuit of pleasure
Obviously sex and naked chicks falls right in line with that definition. So the intent of an advertiser becomes much fuzzier. Where do you draw the line
Re:Come on now... (Score:2)
I concede that. They are targeting people who are looking for Playboy.
But they are not misrepresenting their products as being Playboy. They're saying, "If you like Playboy, you'll like our product too."
And user darn well knows that a search engine's output is not perfect. The user does not have a reasonable expectation that wh
Re:Come on now... (Score:2)
Re:Come on now... (Score:2)
Also, it's not about confusion, it's about using a trademark to make money and promote the competition. If there was brand confusion on top of that, they'd have a case for diminishing the value of their brand, which is a breast of a different cup size.
But your forget... (Score:2)
Both right (Score:2)
With this floating around without an official judgement, there's nothing stopping any compnay from suing anyone who uses the company's plain-word trademark.
/agree (Score:2, Interesting)
And as a company they have a right to "pop-up" whatever they want on their site. Do I think its deceptive? Well yes, because it is. But should it be illegal? Sorry I don't think so.
So yes I think the original judge in this case made a very valid point. The two companies did not use the words with specific references that would lead one to believe they would get Play
I take offense to this... (Score:2, Funny)
Once again the man is trying to keep a brotha down.
I think it's obvious (Score:3, Interesting)
I mean, the words ford and mustang are in the dictionary, too, but wouldn't it violate Ford Motor Company's trademark if those words in a search triggered a banner ad for the Pontiac Grand Am? What about the words chevy and corvette, which are also in the dictionary? How many people think of the words ford, mustang, chevy,and corvette in relation to cars? I bet it's about as many people as would think of the word playboy in relation to a men's magazine.
I disagree with the post, and I think that the first judge in the case got it wrong, not right. I don't think he or she really understood just how the words were being used. The words playboy and playmate were being used to promote a competing product, which, AFAIK, is a violation of trademark law. But maybe another appeals court will feel differently.
Re:I think it's obvious (Score:2)
More to the point, I think that trademark law shouldn't cover this. The point of a trademark is to ensure that there is no consumer confusion between two brands.
Finally, the ruling was only "we won't throw your decision out out of hand -- you can try it in court". T
This ruling may actually have its merits ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Further, it's also good because it is yet-another-blow to "seedy" companies like Claria and WhenU, which install so-called "adware" on users' computers and then produce pop-up ads when the user visits a Web site of the competitor of the very sleezy advertiser.
I'm all for reduced patents and trademark giveaways, but something like this, is a good ruling.
The district court got it wrong.
However, Playboy may have to refile its suit since, at the time, Excite was still owned by the now defunct/dissolved Excite@Home. It was since purchased by Focus Interactive and InfoSpace. And since then, Focus Interactive bought out InfoSpace's remaining stake and now wholly owns Excite.
So their suit may have to target Focus Interactive now.
Cheers,
Doug
Its all about context (Score:2, Informative)
Its not about 'taking words out of the language'.
That just shows the judge isnt comptent to see this case.
It's the machines that make the difference here (Score:4, Insightful)
The judges got it wrong. These people are not selling a magazine called "Our Playboy" or anything that directly infringes. They are using the term to target people interested in that term.... Remember, these words are not being displayed to humans per se, but to MACHINES that index web pages.
It's more like when a marketer uses a computer-generated list to target BMW owners in order to sell them expensive car products.
Perfectly legal !@!!!
What happened to Context? (Score:2)
If someone wants 'whatever.com', type it in - otherwise be prepared to get results not directly related. It's how searching works.
This ruling is assuming that people lack *any* abillity to tell what the real site is. Granted, eBay password grabbers are fake and look real, but where is any site trying to pass itself off as playboy.com or obviously infringing?
Isn't this wh
Trademarks (Score:2)
You: Tell me what you know about Playboy.
Me: You can look Hustler* over there.
I am not passing myself off as Playboy. Nor is Hustler. So I don't think trademark law is being violated. I also don't think trademark law should force anyone setting themselves up as a provider of information to give owners of trademarks preference. It would suck if I got ford.com as the first link every time I searched for Ford Prefect.
* Chosen at random. I haven't
Just testing my new sig (Score:2)
Bond...James Bond... (Score:2, Interesting)
Some unbelievable cases: why the system fails (Score:4, Insightful)
Consider these examples from Overlawyered.com [overlawyered.com]:
Can you own common words? "In one of the broadest crackdowns ever issued against a domain name holder, a federal judge has ordered eReferee.com to stop using the word 'referee' in all of its domain names.
Using his own name a legal risk. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's Bill Wyman shares his name with a somewhat well-known musician who played bass with the Rolling Stones. He was nonetheless unprepared when he received a letter from the musician's lawyer suggesting that he might be violating the other guy's rights by
"'Let's Roll' Trademark Battle Is On". Why'd she have to hire that lawyer? No sooner does the widow of Flight 93 hero Todd Beamer set up a foundation to honor his memory than its lawyer announces that he's having it apply for a trademark on the now-famous phrase "Let's Roll", so that anyone who wants to use the words on hats or t-shirts will have to fork over a royalty. Since September 11 numerous other individuals have also sought to copyright the phrase, although it was in common use before that date. (AP/Las Vegas Sun, Feb. 1)
Someone might get confused. "Just when you think the battle over domain names and trademarks can get no more ridiculous, Pillsbury goes and ups the ante. Universities and companies as large as Sun Microsystems received cease-and-desist letters this week ordering engineers to stop holding what the [giant flour maker] considers illegal 'bake-offs.' But it's not as if the engineers are huddling together around the oven trading stolen recipes -- in techie lingo, a 'bake-off' is a get-together in which software programmers test their creations against network protocols to see if they will work correctly.
It is becoming ever more apparent that the entire system needs to be evaluated and rewritten. But, as easy as this is to blame on an outdated system, this case (the parent post) shows that even when a policy is in place, it will be abused and ignored. Perhaps before Trademarking anything, they should read their own Trademark policy [uspto.gov] or, in the case that they don't recognize playmate as an English word, perhaps they should spend a little time reviewing the dictionary [dictionary.com].
What next, Microsoft finally succeeding in Trademarking "Windows"??? Playboy goes after the children's toy industry because they unashamedly use the term "playmate" in many of its toys?
It makes no matter that these advertisers were using the popularity of these words to boost their services. Capitalizing on things is not a crime. Especially when the terms they are capitalizing on are not trademarkable. If anyone
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Extent of trademarks (Score:2)
The problem I see with this is that trademarks give a company the exclusive right to use a name, within a particular industry. When it comes to pr0n, the word "Playboy" belongs to these guys, but in an unrelated domain, they wouldn't. You could start up the Playboy linoleum manufacturing corporation and have no problems as long as you didn't try to use the bunny logo or otherwise create confusion that you were otherwise related to the other company with that name.
For search engines, this requires a subje
Looking for X? Why not try Y instead? (Score:2)
So, even if this case is lost, I think the worst damage that's going to occur is such ambush keyword buyers are just going to have to ad a fine-print statement saying X is a trademark of X Inc., and Y is a product of Y Inc., which has no relationship to X Inc.
They Cut a Deal! (Score:2, Funny)
Who wants to lay money on it that Hef cut a deal with the judges: "Rule in my favor, and you ALL can party at the mansion!"
OMG the 9th circuit did something conterversial? (Score:2, Flamebait)
These are the same people who said that VOLUNTARY recitation in schools of the pledge of allegiance violates the 1st amendment for using the word
R "playboy" searchers looking for playboy.com ? (Score:4, Interesting)
"Some consumers" - What percentage of people doing search for "playboy" [reference.com] or "playmate" [reference.com] are really looking for www.playboy.com ? [playboy.com]
When I do searches, sometimes I use some word as a "seed." The intention is not to see sites with that keyword precisely, but to see under what category of Google they fall under, or to see what are the other related sites to my keyword. This then allows me to do a more thorough search of the various possibilities.
For example, if I had to do research on inexpensive or free email I would do a search for "Yahoo email" because I know Yahoo provides free emails. The Google category that it falls under is Computers/Internet/E-mail/Free/Web-Based/Y/Yahoo/ [google.com] Once I get the directory path, I can trim it to get Computers/Internet/E-mail/Free/ [google.com]
Now the list that I see Computers/Internet/E-mail/Free/ [google.com] is what I was looking for. I can now select "free email" providers that might provide more space than Yahoo, or better pop3 or imap facilities, or more features like throw-away emails.
My point is that even though I started off with "Yahoo" in my search, I was not looking for Yahoo per se.
So, when I type in "playboy" or "playmate" or "Playboy" or "Playmate" in the search box, I think it is presumptuous of Playboy.com and the Hefners to think I was looking for their site.
And this is why I think they have made a very weak assertion. Look at the wording of their assertion - It is littered with initially ...
because the attorney's understand how weak their assertion really is.I think Playboy.com should be nailed on why they think everyone typing in playboy or playmate is looking for their site. And then, they must be made to prove that they are loosing revenue that might have come to them. Otherwise they are no different from RIAA which makes the assumption that every song that is freely downloaded would have been purchased by the downloader, and hence RIAA adds up the dollar values of the downloaded songs to come up with their "piracy related losses." BS. If I couldn't have downloaded the song for free, I wouldn't have even looked for it - let alone pay for the damn thing. To me, the situation for "playboy" and "playmate" searches is very similar.
Re:How do copyrights hold in a browser-based world (Score:2)
Re:How do copyrights hold in a browser-based world (Score:2)
Re:Is /. always anarchic/libertarian? (Score:2)
I don't think trademark law needs to be repealed, but I do think it should be modified.
In particular, you shouldn't be allowed to get a trademark on any term or image that was in usage (by someone else) prior to your filing for a trademark.
Coca Cola - ok.
Xerox - ok.
Microsoft Windows - ok.
Windows - not ok.
Apple - not ok.
Because we (stupidly IMO) allow
Re:If I go to the store.. (Score:2)
If you go to a restaurant and ask for a Coke and they give you a Pepsi without telling you, that is a problem. My guess is this case is somewhere in the middle. The searcher is looking for Playboy by name, the engine profits by distracting from Playboy by using their name. So its a type of switch, specifically profiting from someone else's rightfully held trademark. Interesting and not nearly as clear-cut as slashthink wants it to be.