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by lutusp
4866 days ago
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> If you're using Heinz' trademark to sell a different product they can sue you easy. No. If you're using the Heinz trademark in such a way as to confuse and mislead the public, then they can sue you. Otherwise probably not. Consider the example of Apple Computer and Apple Music (once owned by the Beatles). Two businesses, no conflict, so no lawsuit. Once Sun Computer threatened to sue me because I had a Web page named "Sun Computer" (the page computed the position of the sun: http://www.arachnoid.com/lutusp/sunrise/). My argument was that I wasn't trying to confuse the public, and my use of the word "sun" was legitimate because it referred to the astronomical object by that name. Their objection was that my use of "Sun Computer" as a page name caused my page to appear above theirs in the Google search listings. I decided their position had merit, and I renamed the page. My point is that it is all about the degree to which use of a trademark or trademarked name would confuse the public and hurt someone's business, not use of a trademark per se. |
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