Chrysler are victims of their own marketing then. Jeep has now entered
the English language, they will forever be defending the trademark.

It's the same problem that Apple is having with it's i-Pod trademark.
Look at the number of mp3 players that are now i-this or pod that.

I remember reading a British photo magazine years ago (like how I
steered this back towards photography :-) The author referred to a
ball point pen as a biro in one of his articles and got a politely
worded letter from the Biro trademark owners lawyers, telling him to
stop that. He was simply unaware that it was a brand.

I have no point, other than if an advertising campaign & the product
are successful, & it enters common language usage, the trademark
owners are going to be very busy.

Dave

On 11/25/06, Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> But Jeep is a trademarked brand, and it's a valuable one. So if you
> own the trademark, you do your best to protect it. It's just good
> business. What should have been or could have been is irrelevant.
> Willys made it a brand. American Motors and, later, Chrysler invested
> in it and will of course want to protect it.
> Paul

-- 
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
[email protected]
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net

Reply via email to