VirtualDub Author Stymied by Trademark Troll 102
trifish writes "The author of VirtualDub wrote on his blog that 'someone has registered "VirtualDub" as a "word mark" in Germany as of June 6, 2006 and is now sending out notices to people in that country demanding money for so much as mentioning the program and linking to the SourceForge download from their website.' Well, I confess that only now I fully understand why Linux, Mozilla, TrueCrypt, and other open source projects register their names as trademarks."
mod him down! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:mod him down! (Score:5, Funny)
Offtopic -- Invention won't do what it claims
Flamebait -- Violates known laws of physics
Troll -- Attempt to steal another person's invention
Redundant -- Has been "invented" before. Multiple times.
Insightful -- What a cool invention! Also known as troll attractant.
Interesting -- Not sure what it's used for, but fun to watch
Informative -- Will be referred to in future inventions
Funny -- It blows up when someone uses it
Overrated -- Does something redundant, but with just one click!
Underrated -- No one knows what it does, but it will form a completely new industry
Does that mean ... (Score:5, Funny)
Hmm... kinda correct, if you think about it...
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Hey, when inventions can actually do that, then we have a good deal to talk about. You're confusing it with inventions that claim to violate these laws.
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Re:mod him down! (Score:4, Insightful)
The unfortunate side effect of me using the moderation system as I believe it was intended to be used (rather than the way it's actually used by most of the mods) is that I get periodic unfair moderation metamoderations, which comes with a karma hit =(. This actually disencourages me from moderating, which is unfortunate since I try very hard to be an impartial mod and consider whether their post has validity, not whether I agree with it. I'm not willing to karma whore to make up for lost moderation karma, so in this sense the system favors the abusers.
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Right. You'll stop being asked to moderate well before you lose enough karma to affect your posting bonus, so why should negative karma from m2 reduce your desire to moderate? Wouldn't it be better to continue to moderate normally until you stop getting mod points?
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You're right, group think isn't as bad here as elsewhere on the net, but it's not nearly as good as you'd find in some other communities. It's a fundamenta
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That's an example of group think/moderation working. It doesn't really matter how good the comment is. If it's defending religion or promoting some stupid study where corelation has been mistaken for causation it's supposed to get modded down. I
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Moderation isn't selective idea voting, its comment quality voting. Moderation should bring forth and hilight the opposing viewpoints rather than crushing the less popular viewpoint. This is why the catego
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Personaly I think the patent office can be completely circumvented if you just make your application long enough and with enough sufficiently technical terms, sort of like a high school teacher that gives the dry 12 page report an A after glossing over the first page and deeming it of sufficiently impress
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Who? (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, one wonders if there is some legal way to charge and/or get money back from somebody who is illegally using the name of your product to extort money.
Re:Who? (Score:5, Informative)
Let's Just Be AFRAID (Score:1)
It's time to unleash AFRAID! (Anti-Fraudster Raider Agents, International Division).
They'll descend from helicopters, hook up to fire hydrants with reservoir-equipped hoses, then blast powerful streams of water and detergent to wash out the mouths, indeed the whole bodies, of these scuttling roaches.
Re:Whoa....I just heard of this new technology ... (Score:2)
I'm not one for vigilante justice (Score:1)
Re:I'm not one for vigilante justice (Score:4, Funny)
So this IS South Korea?
Jawohl! (Score:2)
Re:Jawohl! (Score:5, Informative)
There actually *is* a reason why Germans are required to have a imprint on their pages (Don't believe me? Look for "6 Teledienstgesetz").
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Of course, I could tell that guy to screw himself, but I would risk being dragged before a court, and I'd be at risk to loose. A German proverb goes like "being on high see and being before a court means to be a
Re:Jawohl! (Score:5, Funny)
Be sure to use it as a verb, that really pisses off trademark holders.
IANAL, so how do I know? I googled it and sure enough, trademark owners hate that.
Google it yourself and see.
Google THIS (Score:5, Funny)
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Maybe even a googol [wikipedia.org] of them
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Of course, there was another serious typo in the book (a logarithmic time-line that should have been in seconds, but was labelled in years. Great book nonetheless.
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davidh
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Quit it! (Score:2)
Verbing weirds language.
Virtuadub (Score:3, Funny)
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In the UK I don't think that's possible, what with there being no such legal object.
Re:he could probably be sued for copyright infring (Score:1)
correction 1 (Score:2, Informative)
Example: http://lexetius.com/2002,3142 [lexetius.com]
Microsoft trolled VirtualDub as well... (Score:1, Interesting)
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Illegal Patent Trolls? (Score:2, Informative)
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I thought Europe had better protections (Score:1)
Is there any recourse against this marmot!
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Re:I thought Europe had better protections (Score:4, Interesting)
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Why not instead pick Norway as an example, just because I'm familiar with it. Probably has one of the most modern data protection laws around. http://www.jus.uio.no/iri/forskning/lib/papers/dp_ norway/dp_norway.html [jus.uio.no] Neither was the iTunes thing
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FYI, I know Sweden and Norway are different (Score:2)
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And as every sword has two edge, I would advise watching the movie "In the Name of the Father" which is inspired by a real case where British police abused its power.
As always who guards against the guardians?
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Not only does the survery the slashdot article links to show a huge difference between Europe and the US (the only European country that is worse than the US is Turkey), but I find it very hard to believe the numbers in the survey that the BBC quotes.
I have met very few creationists in Britain, despite living these most of my life and despite many of my friends being people I met through churches and despite moving aro
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(a) Britain (or, more precisely, the United Kingdom) most certainly does have a consitution. It just doesn't consist of a single concise written document.
(b) A written constitution is no guarantee of civil rights. For nearly 80 years, the USA had both a written constitution and legal slavery.
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Comments more interesting... (Score:5, Interesting)
No less troubling, though, are those who can't do a damn thing in life trying to legally steal from those who actually produce something of value. I can't think of any better word to describe the actions of people who create nothing, not even ideas, and sue when someone comes up with a device that loosely resembles their mystery ideas.
As good /.'ers (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Comments more interesting... (Score:5, Informative)
Why again is it illegal to shoot lawyers on sight?
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I don't trust lawyers further than I can throw them. Twice so when it comes to IT topics.
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Is it illegal? Dick Cheney did it [usatoday.com] when his popularity was down, and got away with it.
Shooting lawyers... (Score:1)
Re: Comments more interesting... (Score:1, Interesting)
Basically, if someone rejects a demand for license fees with well-founded reasons of the above, the trademarkholder is forced to initiate legal actio
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"I can't think of any better word" (Score:1)
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Lawyers are still an improvement over the natural order, though. There will always be people trying to steal. What the law does is replaces violence with a courtroom.
This is an easy one (Score:3, Funny)
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Quickly mark in the USA. (Score:1)
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> since the author can provide proof of creation and originally naming it.
Sorry, but everything you wrote is utter nonsense. The filing date and geographical jurisdiction are what counts. You can "override" it only in USA (not in Germany), and only if the holder of the German trademark does not oppose your US registration.
Er... this is stupid (Score:4, Informative)
You can't sue someone for using your trademark in a publication, as long as the trademark actually referrs to your product, there is no problem.
Why do you think review sites are allowed to bash Sony / Microsoft / FooBrand products without fear of retribution?
The point of a trademark is not to keep people from talking about your product, it is to keep another company from pretending to be your product.
Re:Er... this is stupid (Score:5, Informative)
His claim is that he owns the trademark and has a product (if he has one is irrelevant, at least for the law) by that name, and that the "false" VirtualDub is trying to mooch from his publicity.
He's not suing people who talk about it. He sues people who link to the downloads.
Still no case (Score:3, Informative)
This is not patent law, where the user is the infringer - it is trademark law.
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I don't believe this is true. My understanding of trademark law is that registration is not enough: you have to show actual use of the trademark. This may be different in Germany, but I don't suspect so.
Is that even possible? (Score:2)
You would need to have a copyright on a word in order to prevent people from using it and that's not possible afaik.
Here comes the confusion (Score:2)
From the United States Copyright Office:
Why Linux is trademarked (Score:5, Informative)
In the case of Linux(tm), it's precisely because back in the mid-nineties, someone named William Della Croce, Jr. tried to hijack the mark [linuxjournal.com] and extort money from various vendors and publishers. It took a year, and a bunch of money, to get the matter resolved [linuxjournal.com] and the trademark reassigned to Linus.
It was an ugly and sordid affair, and I really wish there were better alternatives than either registering a mark or allowing it to be attacked by trolls. Prior use of a mark--even an unregistered mark--does (or should) count against trolls, at least in the US, but it can still be a hassle to fight them off if the mark's not registered. Personally, I would like to see the term "Linux" become a generic term (like "Aspirin"), but I can understand why Linus is reluctant to allow that to happen after the Dell Croce incident.
Openoffice.org? (Score:3, Informative)
How would virtualdub.org sound?
eMule also had the same problem. (Score:1, Interesting)
Someone registered that name in Germany, and sent out letters. It got to court, and he transferred the trademark back to the author.
Two differences exist between the cases:
1) The authors of eMule live in Germany.
2) The troll published an eMule fork himself. (possibly with spyware)
You should look exactly on what they did. I don't want to see VirtualDub renamed. (anyone mentioned WireShark? wxWidgets? Joomla!?)
Rename it? (Score:1)
Jaysyn
Prior Art ? (Score:2)
It would be pretty easy to show he was using it first.