Bethesda Tells Minecraft Creator: Cease and Desist 200
dotarray writes with news that Notch, creator of Minecraft, has received a letter from Zenimax, parent company of Bethesda, demanding that he rename his company's new game, which is called Scrolls. They claim it bears too strong a resemblance to The Elder Scrolls. Notch said:
"First of all, I love Bethesda. I assume this nonsense is partly just their lawyers being lawyers, and a result of trademark law being the way it is. ... I agree that the word 'Scrolls' is part of that trademark, but as a gamer, I have never ever considered that series of (very good) role playing games to be about scrolls in any way, nor was that ever the focal point of neither their marketing nor the public image. The implication that you could own the right to all individual words within a trademark is also a bit scary. We looked things up and realized they didn’t have much of a case, but we still took it seriously. Nothing about Scrolls is meant to in any way derive from or allude to their games."
Can't you not (Score:2)
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They aren't claiming copyright, so that's irrelevant.
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Isn't scrolls a quite common word making it untrademarkeable?
Especially when it comes to role playing games, most of them use the word in the normal gameplay.
That would make it pretty nonsensical to grant a trademark on that word for using it as the product's name.
This is not even taking into account that they don't use their trademark enough for it being confused with the Mojang game.
The official name of their Elder Scrolls series contains the word, but they are most commonly known and marketed by their su
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I'd say Apple is more common than Scrolls, yet you know you can't use it.
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Or music? [wikipedia.org]
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An yet several companies have the word apple in them...
You don't need to even have the word "apple" in your business name to have Apple come after you. Woolworths in Australia changed their logo to one that resembles apple peel, and Apple went after them [smh.com.au].
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Exactly! this is like Apple suing for someone who used the word 'case" because they sell a case for the iPod. Nobody calls it "Elder scrolls" and even in their own marketing it has been Oblivion, Morrowind, etc.
While I hope the guy tells them where to jump sadly in this country justice is for the rich and they could crush the poor bastard like a bug by tying his ass up in court for a decade so he'll probably have to cave.
More like Apple suing someone for using the word Apple, or the word Pod. Say what you will, someone selling an "Apple PC" or a "ePod Music Player" would probably be looked at with a raised eyebrow in the US.
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I haven't played a lot of RPGs, but all RPGs that had magic in them (specially roguelikes) had different magic scrolls you could read for one time effects. Like wands in NetHack, if I'm not mistaken.
Magic Scrolls, therefore scrolls, are common in RPG games.
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copyright? no.
trademark? yes - for example - windows
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I love how that whole page is set up so that they don't lose their trademark as it falls into common usage.
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Except that it isn't common usage.
Do you install a Windows onto your computer when you install the Linux OS?
Windows as it pertains to a software program is not common usage.
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Except that it isn't common usage.
Do you install a Windows onto your computer when you install the Linux OS?
Windows as it pertains to a software program is not common usage.
If I ask my parents, my coworkers, and even some of the people at my school? Yes, they are interested in hearing about this "Windows Linux" that I keep talking about.
Just like how a lot of my friends are interested in trying out "Windows Chrome" cause it might be better than "Windows Explorer".
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Adobe does the same - they have a page on their website telling you the correct usage of the word Photoshop. Including gems similar to:
Wrong: I am going to Photoshop this picture.
Right: I am going to use the popular Photoshop® image editor to edit this picture
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Firstly, this isn't copyright; it's a trademark. They're two entirely different things.
Secondly, you can't trademark common words in the industry in which they're common usage. For instance, "Apple" as the name of a greengrocer probably wouldn't fly, but "Apple" as the name of a computer company, or a music label obviously does. Also, trademarks only apply to things within the same domain - which is why Apple music and Apple computers could co-exist, until Apple started making inroads into the music industr
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You can trademark them. This is not the same as copyright.
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No, but you can trademark them, when used in combination with a certain technology or application. Hence, I cannot name a CPU "Pentium" [wikipedia.org], I cannot call my chocolate "Kinder Chocolate" [wikipedia.org] (German for "Children Chocolate", a brand name, believe it or not, they trademarkt "children". It's not possible anymore in Germany to trademark common words, but Ferrero managed to slip through. They actually lost the case when trying to take over "kinder.de", owned by an online family portal, creating one of the most interest
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normally copyright single common words?
You can't even copyright phrases. You can, however, secure a trademark on unique phrases and words. If it were possible to get a trademark on a single, common word, Microsoft would stop anyone else from using "word" in their names.
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Apple can suck my iPenis.
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Let me guess...
There's an app for that.
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Pull up some youporn on your iPhone and iPenis gratification becomes free-99 at the local Fapp Store.
Re:Can't you not (Score:5, Funny)
Anywhere between 5 and 10... I usually get 5 that are marked with the number 20 on a regular basis. I trade these scrolls with other people for goods and services and they usually hand me back scrolls with the numbers 1, 5, 10 or different combinations thereof in change. ;)
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Not really.
The moment you start pissing off the elite with such tricks, you'll find that any legal support you may have will mysteriously evaporate.
Re:Can't you not (Score:4, Informative)
Yep, and it's pretty settled: Microsoft lost in the USA when claiming "Microsoft Windows" somehow gave them the exclusive right to the common word "Windows." And don't even get me started about that "edge" crap.
If you write a game about X (e.g. scrolls,) there is basically no way in the USA you can be prevented from using X in your product's name. It is descriptive, and can not be the exclusive property of someone else.
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An their right to the term will only be in the areas they've trademarked it. So if they haven't trademarked it in everything then you could use Windows in the name of your toilet paper. In fact there are other trademarks for Windows as I recall and at the moments there are two trademarks for Scrolls and two for Scroll. This hasn't stopped the numerous other trademarks with th
Billable hours (Score:3, Insightful)
If this is how Zenimax's legal representation justifies their retainers they should be fired.
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Why would you say that? ZeniMax has to defend their trademarks. Obviously, they would never take actual legal action against Notch for this, but they have to send a cease and desist in order to protect themselves during potential future litigation against companies that DO infringe upon their trademarks in a way that COULD harm ZeniMax. Why this is newsworthy beats me.
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Why would you say that? ZeniMax has to defend their trademarks. Obviously, they would never take actual legal action against Notch for this, but they have to send a cease and desist in order to protect themselves during potential future litigation against companies that DO infringe upon their trademarks in a way that COULD harm ZeniMax. Why this is newsworthy beats me.
There, fixed that for you.
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Why would you say that? ZeniMax have to defend their trademarks. Obviously, they would never take actual legal action against Notch for this, but they have to send a cease and desist in order to protect themselves during potential future litigation against companies that DO infringe upon their trademarks in a way that COULD harm ZeniMax. Why this is newsworthy beats me.
There, fixed that for you.
If you're gonna be an egotistical jackass posting simply to correct my grammar, perhaps you should actually correct it. Way to fail.
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Why would you say that? ZeniMax have to defend their trademarks. Obviously, they would never take actual legal action against Notch for this, but they have to send a cease and desist in order to protect themselves during potential future litigation against companies that DO infringe upon their trademarks in a way that COULD harm ZeniMax. Why this is newsworthy beats me.
There, fixed that for you.
If you're gonna be an egotistical jackass posting simply to correct my grammar, perhaps you should actually correct it. Way to fail.
I wasn't correcting grammar at all, and never intended to do so... I was adding appropriate emphasis to make it absolutely positively crystal clear and without doubt that they really didn't have any good choice in the matter to let the issue slide.
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From Notch's Blog:
"Today, I got a 15 page letter from some Swedish lawyer firm, saying they demand us to stop using the name Scrolls, that they will sue us (and have already paid the fee to the Swedish court), and that they demand a pile of money up front before the legal process has even started."
Directly threatening to sue and demanding a 'pile of money' sure sounds like actual legal action to me.
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But you don't need to do that. You do need to actively protect your trademarks. However you only need to take actual action if likely confusion would result.
Since Notch's game is very unlikely to cause confusion, a cease and desist is not only not warranted, but might even open up Bethesda to potential liability for one of several torts. (I've never heard of anybody successfully suing for an overzealous C&D letter, but that does not make it impossible.)
What may been prudent is to send a letter remindin
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Indeed, if the games are not causing confusion there is no place for a trademark infringement case.
Example, let's said I make a racer game called Mario Ferrari. Like so Nintendo has a good case that I'm trying to make it seem like a version of Mario Kart. Even Ferrari, the car company, belonging to a completely different industry, has a case that I'm trying to make it seem as if they endorsed the car models in the game.
BUT, if there was a very popular F-1 pilot named Mario Ferrari, and the game has licensed
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They don't have a trademark on a common dictionary word. They have trademark on the phrase, the appearance, and it's branding.
If you own Rock and Roll Racing you're not defending your trademark if you C&D the NASCAR Racing dev team. You're just being dicks.
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You're absolutely correct about the first part, but your analogy doesn't apply. There's a difference between suing for the use of "Scrolls" and suing for the use of "Racing". "Racing" would be a general term that simply describes the game and nearly every racing game has "Racing" in the title so it couldn't be recognized to be trademarked by anybody. "Scrolls" is an important part of the game's title and in order for ZeniMax to ensure that they'll be able to defend their trademarks in the future against tho
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Scrolls are a common way for documents to be presented and tales to be told in fantasy games.
They narrow their usage of the term with "Elder Scrolls".
Using Scrolls in the generic doesn't dilute and I'll bet you a donut this won't stand up to judicial scrutiny. I understand that they have to consistently protect trademarks from infringement to keep the trademark, but this is just bullying.
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Using Scrolls in the generic doesn't dilute and I'll bet you a donut this won't stand up to judicial scrutiny.
Of course it wouldn't. ZeniMax wouldn't in their right mind sue over this. All they did was send a C&D to cover their ass. This will become newsworthy when this becomes a lawsuit. Until then, it's just stupid sensationalism and blaming the company and making them out to be heartless bullies when all they want is to not be fucked by the stupid judicial system.
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I understand that legally speaking, companies need to defend their trademarks. However, I'm not certain where this notion that sending a C&D letter without following it up counts as defending a trademark comes from, and I have seen it at least two times in this thread alone.
If somebody is in court challenging a trademark because it wasn't defended, do you think the judge is going to respond favorably to "But we sent a C&D, we just never had any intention of making him cease or desist!?" Or "you'
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You mean like that news post about a google automatic car that crashed when a human manually drove it? Yep, that was much more interesting...
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If you don't like it then setup your tags properly. Complaining here to people that are interested in the news is wasting your own time.
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You have a list of evil software companies that doesn't include Adobe or Symantec?
Evil Software Companies (Score:2)
You have a list of evil software companies that doesn't include Adobe or Symantec?
I like how the odd part is not making a list of evil software companies, but making the wrong one. =)
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And you'd probably only have to subtract, rarely to add.
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Of course even that is very low on the scale of true corporate evil.
Shit will hit the fan (Score:3, Interesting)
I can't imagine this will be upheld... (Score:2)
Seriously, you can't even use PART of a trademark now? "The Elder Scrolls" is quite different from "Scrolls."
That would be like saying you can't call a game "Blade" or "Mount" because of "Mount & Blade," or have a game called "Magic" because of "Might & Magic" ... or ...
Maybe this is just because they have to be proactive about keeping their trademark or something. I don't know. Stupid. :)
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Ask the Cleric.
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Re:I can't imagine this will be upheld... (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe this is just because they have to be proactive about keeping their trademark or something. I don't know. Stupid. :)
The problem is that afaict there is no penalty for overreaching when enforcing your trademark but there is a VERY significant penalty (loss of enforcability of the trademark) for nor reaching far enough.
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That would be like saying you can't call a game "Blade" or "Mount" because of "Mount & Blade,"
I'm gonna have a game called Mountain Blade and Mytan Magic (or possibly He Rose of Mytan Magic).
makes sense.. (Score:2, Funny)
Elder Scrolls is just later in the series:
Scrolls The Early Years.
Scrolls.
Elder Scrolls.
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I thought the new sequel naming convention went:
The Elder Scrolls
2 Elder 2 Scroll
Elder Scrolls
Scrolls
Should we start making a list? (Score:3)
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Or the Word 'Final'.
There was the game Final Fight. Then there's the series Final Fantasy. Actually Final Fight had several versions so it could be a 'series' too. So now, you have a Final Fight game and you have Final Fantasy. Both involve fighting. Confused which is which fellow gamers? Think not.
Elder than the Elder Scrolls (Score:3, Informative)
Meanwhile... (Score:2, Insightful)
....meanwhile, i have yet to see Notch get his panties in a bunch about Total Miner, the C- Minecraft knockoff coming to Xbocks Live in the near future. Yes I know the history of Minecraft, and I know that Notch borrowed a lot from Infiniminer. But this also goes to show that game 'concepts' aren't sacred.
I can see if Notch named his new game "Alder Scrolls" or "Newer Scrolls" or "Minerfall: The Buggiest Scrolls Evar" or "Iron Scroll: Mining The Oblivion" or anything else that would directly allude to ano
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hello lawyers, meet internet (Score:4, Interesting)
Technology companies are pretty good about properly integrating their marketing and public relations efforts into the business proper. So if they need to do a safety recall the PR people are involved in the process; a decent PR guy can turn "the XYZ-5000 sprays customers with burning acid" recall into "XYZ really cares about its customers, and as a lovely fluffy precaution we're fixing all our XYZ-5000s, even though most of them are perfectly super and don't experience moderate thermal variances". Engineering, QA, customer relations, finance - every department doesn't get to communicate with the public (or do anything that's obviously going to end up being public) without someone in PR there to make sure the message is put out right.
Legal departments, by dint of (often broken) corporate org-trees are a notable exception to this. When they see a problem, they fix it the lawyer way, and the rest of the company never knows until after the fact. In olden times of yore stuff like this was trivia between one legal office and another, and only the most nebbish of corporate historian ever know why a product changed its name or wasn't orange coloured any more. So the lawyers behaved as they always did, striking as quickly and as hard as they could, writing letters as outlandishly vitriolic and court pleadings as wildly exaggerated as they felt they could get away with, knowing that things would stay on the downlow and whatever happened only the outcome would matter to anyone.
They didn't consider that, if you sent someone a demand letter, the first thing they'd do is tweet about it to their entire customer base (which turns out to be a big proportion of your customer base too), and post the letter (with all its wild and crazy claims) on the internet, for everyone to point and laugh at. If it's the all-too-common shot across the bows (rather than a serious attempt) you risk looking like a rather unhinged bully.
Like it or not (and the lawyers don't like it, and decorate their broadsides with all kinds of "if you publish this letter we'll sue to for that too" stuff) everything anyone in the corporation does reflects on the whole outfit. The PR folks should be in on the ground floor with anything like this. They don't get to veto every lawsuit or every letter, but they can put a choke-hold on the stupid. Right now Zenimax's PR guy has his head in his hands; I'll bet the first thing he knew about the whole affair was when he read it online, and he'll spend next week fighting fires and soothing angry faces. Notch probably won't change the name, but if he does that's just another news cycle of bad PR for Zenimax.
ironic (Score:2)
The first place I'd heard about Skyrim and how cool it's going to be was from Notch himself, months ago.
lawyers can go eat a poop sandwich.
Nothing to See Here. Move Along. (Score:4, Interesting)
The first rule of having a trademark is "don't lose your trademark." This is done by defending it against every potential threat, no matter how tenuous the connection.
Essentially, if you don't defend yourself, then your trademark is automatically weakened.
For example, if your trademark is for a video game called "Elder Scrolls," and you allow a game called "Scrolls," to be published unchecked, then you've effectively stated that the word "Scrolls," and titles including that word, are all acceptable, and cannot be challenged by trademark.
In the end, Zenimax either maintains their current position by forcing Notch to back down, or their trademark is more clearly defined, including restrictions on what Notch can call this and its sequels (if any).
Thus the only losing move is not to play.
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For example, if your trademark is for a video game called "Elder Scrolls," and you allow a game called "Scrolls," to be published unchecked, then you've effectively stated that the word "Scrolls," and titles including that word, are all acceptable, and cannot be challenged by trademark.
Which is already the case - Bethseda has a trademark on "Elder Scrolls", not "all games with Scroll in the tite". They cannot legally veto other game titles simply because they have a word in common. All they can do is bluster and send threatening letters that would be blown away in court. "Scrolls" is not their trademark, they have no obligation to attack it, and it doesn't weaken "Elder Scrolls" in the slightest. Now, if they were threatening a game called "Eldest Scrolls", or "Ancient Scrolls" they migh
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The first rule of having a trademark is "don't lose your trademark." This is done by defending it against every potential threat, no matter how tenuous the connection.
Essentially, if you don't defend yourself, then your trademark is automatically weakened.
For example, if your trademark is for a video game called "Elder Scrolls," and you allow a game called "Scrolls," to be published unchecked, then you've effectively stated that the word "Scrolls," and titles including that word, are all acceptable, and cannot be challenged by trademark.
In the end, Zenimax either maintains their current position by forcing Notch to back down, or their trademark is more clearly defined, including restrictions on what Notch can call this and its sequels (if any).
Thus the only losing move is not to play.
When I was a kid, I didn't understand why documentation with my Legos said "Please call them Lego bricks, not Legos." Now I know that's part of their trademark defense policy.
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That is possibly what the Zenimax's lawyers are thinking, but even if that would be true it would still be missing the big picture. Let me quote from little further down this conversation.
"Bethesda is in my shit list now.
I am putting any company that is letting itself run by lawyers instead of customer-oriented executives into that list. and bethesda just made that list. i am bored lately, and i was toying with the idea of playing an old school rpg franchise i havent played yet. and actually i stood over el
This will be retracted (Score:5, Interesting)
Every now and then we see lawyers for a company do silly things like this. Lawyers live in their own world, nearly wholly disconnected from ours. In their world, they send lots of letters on anything that even remotely might kind of sorta maybe be in the same ballpark as their trademark.
In the real world, marketing sees the reaction to that. When it makes news (like this case), marketing goes to the CEO and says "hey legal is causing us grief." The CEO then tells legal to play nice in this case. Particularly since if they actually tried to challenge this in court they'd get laughed at.
So, publicity will solve this one.
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More like no case (Score:3)
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It should also be pointed out that the several trademark registries allowed Mojang to register Scrolls months ago. Including US and Sweden (registering it as an EU trademark).
If true, it's disturbing that it's possible to register a trademark for a single, common English word.
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yep..
I think next up: "Songs" "Tunes" "Motors" "Engines" "Legends" "Elders" etc..
even if he would refer to it as scrolls himself.. it would be better to prefix it with something, even if it's just a word taken at random from some book(flip open a latin book, flip pages, point finger).
Talk about disrepectful to the gamers. (Score:2)
First, someone inform these tools that gamers aren't so retarded to not know the difference. We are computer gamers, not console gamers, we aren't playing Pogs, we aren't completely retarded. Secondly, the Minecraft guy is small potatoes, he's the little guy, the underdog, and busting his balls is a great publicity stunt to paint yourself as being a complete dick. I don't like buying games from people who act like dicks. Why? Because being a dick is a habit, and how long does it take for them to be dicks wi
Bethesda is in my shit list now. (Score:2)
i have no tolerance for lawyery gimmicks and cutthroat capitalism in gaming. anyone who curbs my future potential fun - which u
Interesting paragraph... (Score:2)
"Today, I got a 15 page letter from some Swedish lawyer firm, saying they demand us to stop using the name Scrolls, that they will sue us (and have already paid the fee to the Swedish court), and that they demand a pile of money up front before the legal process has even started."
Forgive me if I'm wrong, but isn't it a standard not-technically-a scam in the EU / UK for legal departments to file on behalf of customers they don't actually represent, requesting legal fees and the like? Something to do with how the courts (particularly the trademark system) works over there? I seem to remember many, many, MANY moons ago a discussion on Slashdot about some legal firm in Germany doing something similar.
Actually, I'm surprised this came first (Score:2)
I would have guessed that it would have been Blizzard going after him for using a word + "Craft"
Argument against Notch (Score:2)
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Re:hmmm (Score:4, Funny)
If we were to ask a magic eight-ball about this, it would probably suggest something along the lines of "My sources say no."
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They officially dropped the "Computer" from the name a few years ago. That said, I think they're suing an assortment of Android handset makers for their illicit use of the word "Inc.". Their case looks pretty strong, I have to say. I think they added the word "innovation" to the suit, so you know they're serious.
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Ironically, the agreement was that Apple Computers could never use their "Apple" in association with music... iTunes = whoops?
Reply to This Parent
Afaict it went something like
Apple records sued apple computer in a dubious (the two companies at the time were in totally different markets) trademark lawsuit
Apple computer settled with an agreement that they would keep out of the music buisness (which I guess made sense at the time)
Apple computer launched itunes
Apple records sued apple computer againclaiming that running itunes was a violation of their previous agreement
Apple computer settled by buying all rights to the apple trademark from apple records
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That was two completely different areas, one in computers and one in music, and there was still a trademark battle. Now we have video game Scrolls fighting video game The Elder Scrolls.
I think Bethesda has a case here. If I came out with a game called "Grand Theft" I guarantee you Rockstar would be all over me and I would lose. If Microsoft can own the word "Windows" on anything computer related then Bethesda can own Scrolls for anything video game related
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That's silly. You should follow Bethesda's example and trademark the word, instead.
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There's little connection.
Maybe if The Elder Scrolls series was colloquially known as "Scrolls" they might have a point. But it's always "Elder Scrolls" or "TES" and more often than not people name a specific game in the series (ie: Oblivion, Morrowind, Skyrim, etc)
This is just a case of lawyers doing their damnedest to protect their trademark by attacking everything in a 50 foot radius... and they end up making the whole company look like asses instead.
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Uhhhh? The company's called Mojang. Scrolls is another game they're working on. 3 seconds with Google would have told you that and spared you however long you wasted writing that up. :|
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Well, yeah, but that still can fall under 3 seconds with Google. :P
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Given your UID, I doubt you've been here long enough to know what 'going downhill' really entails.....
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