Posted by Kate on May 21, 2009
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Posted by Kate on May 13, 2009
First there was Napster, a platform for uploading and sharing music that was mainly in violation of copyrights.
Then there was Google Books Search (aka GoogleBooks), where Google had scanned and uploaded all sorts of books, attempting to be the next Library of Alexandria – but on the internet. Unfortunately, they rolled right over copyright issues. (See Google’s website on the settlement here.)
Now, perhaps it is because of the advent of the Amazon.com Kindle, increasing the popularity of electronic books (I like the smell of paper books myself), there is an increasing and alarming number of other sites that are being used to upload and share copyrighted novels and other works in violation of those copyrights. For instance, books and novels are popping up without authorization on Scribd and Wattpad, which are marketed for uploading documents like college theses and self-published novels. As soon as they are notified of violations, the sites say they are taking the violative material down, but it poses an interesting question. Regardless of the intended or orignal use of these sites, if a deluge occurs, can they be forced to go the way of Napster, if they cannot get this under control? Time will tell.
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/12/technology/internet/12digital.html?_r=1
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Posted by Kate on May 10, 2009
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Posted by Kate on May 10, 2009
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Posted by Kate on May 6, 2009
That’s all I’m going to say. Informative! Click HERE.
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Posted by Kate on May 4, 2009
So, I’m flipping through the magazine du jour, trying to relax when there it is: an add for the Visa Black Card, which has a little TM symbol next to it. Hmmm…. I think. Didn’t they just blatantly rip that off of American Express?
Turns out AMEX never registered it. Yes, yes, I hear you shouting: “Even if you don’t register a trademark, you should have a common law right to use it!” The problem here is apparently that American Express never called or marketed their black card as the “Black Card”. So, they didn’t “use” it? Instead, they call theirs The Centurion Card. It was only popular culture — movies, rappers, moguls, and the like – that called The Cenurion Card the Black Card. So American Express never “used” that name. Thus, they’d be hard pressed to prove rights. They also never secured the domain name so another couldn’t use it. Oooops.
So, along comes Visa and swoops it up, sticks a TM on it and gets the domain name www.blackcard.com.
So far it looks like AMEX is silent.
Lesson learned…. look out for what people call your product — it maybe a better name than what you used.
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