Yup, that's exactly what all that Apple Corps (The beatles' music label) vs. 
Apple Computer Inc was all about. They had some trademark scuffle, a lawsuit 
was involved, apple signed something along the lines of "We won't enter the 
music biz, and as long as we don't you haven't a leg to stand on", and then 
iTMS opened, and there were some, uh, issues. Which I guess they worked out 
to everyone's satisfaction. But there you go, nice textbook trademark law 
case, and shows one of the inevitable weaknesses in such a system (companies 
that started out in entirely separate businesses growing into positions 
where they could be confused). Laws aren't perfect, they can't be. As long 
as they do more good than harm it's good, and I'm fairly sure trademark law 
stays on the books with that guidance.

Given that apple entered the music biz under a new name (iTunes, iTMS, or 
something along those lines), and that these are civil cases, judges are 
probably going to be relatively lenient vs. apple; they couldn't very well 
have foreseen that they'd be ending up here, and they put in some effort to 
attempt to avoid confusion. Apple Corps also isn't exactly a powerhouse of a 
brand either.

One of the major aspects of this case, to contrast it to patent lawsuits, is 
that apple's financial risk even in case such a judgement spectacularly 
blows up in their face is limited. Putting in some good faith work is 
usually not going to wreck your business (i.e. rebranding a few things, 
adding names, changing logos, showing a judge you're putting in a decent 
effort to avoid confusion). It might wreck your business if you've actually 
based your entire business on customers thinking you are actually some other 
company, but in those cases that's kinda the point of the law, so that's 
good.

The worst case scenario for most patent lawsuits is of the "My company is 
either bankrupt or so far up ye olde creek I'll need a million paddles to 
navigate my way back out of there" level. Sure, that rarely happens, but 
with that threat on the table it means any amount of posturing is bound to 
scare somebody into settling a ridiculous case on the teensy tiny chance 
going to court results in that horrorshow scenario. Come to think of it, I'm 
somewhat surprised all these patent reform discussions never mention a 
(severe) limitation on penalties. Sure, it lessens the payday of Joe Q. Lone 
Inventor (who doesn't really exist except in the movies, but, hey, he's 
_the_ strawman of choice for pro-patent discussions), but even with limited 
penalties, if Joe Q. Inventor can score a million or two max. out of 
bigcorp's attempt to copy their way into his business, well, he's still a 
millionaire.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "The 
Java Posse" group.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/javaposse/-/_GyfvQdrco0J.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/javaposse?hl=en.

Reply via email to