Slashdot Mirror


The Apple Name Game

Apple Core sent a link to an article running in Australia about Apple fighting for their name with some little telco called Apple Communications. Well, they were called that. Now they are Green.

33 of 286 comments (clear)

  1. Well... by Lshmael · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I know at least one person is going to bash me for this, but if you were founding a company, wouldn't you try to come up with an original name? I mean, there are a telecommunications company, so it is possible that they could be mistaken for Apple.

  2. sheesh... by skydude_20 · · Score: 4, Funny

    People fighting over generic names of fruits, whats next?!? people fighting over generic names of holes, like windows???

    --
    Jesus saves souls and redeems them for valuable cash prizes
    1. Re:sheesh... by thegrommit · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What's funny is that Apple Computer had to cut a deal with the Beatles record (called Apple) to keep their name.

  3. Who are they trying to play off of? by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In Europe, there's also a telecomm company by the name of Orange. It appears their first selection of Apple Communications was the opposite of Orange, and now their second choice of Green is as well.

  4. Name fight lives on by class_A · · Score: 4, Informative

    I seem to remember Apple has been through a name fight before...

  5. Re:is it just me... by NineNine · · Score: 4, Insightful

    MS is trying to get software manufacturers to stop using "Windows". Apple is going after completely unrelated businesses. Big difference.

  6. Love/Hate... screw it, I love my Powerbook. by TellarHK · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We love Apple, we hate Apple... Argh, why must this company be so fucking schizophrenic in how it treats people? C'mon, Apple! Make up your mind, are you an asshole megacorp-wannabe or a company that tries to do What's Right(tm) by people? I just... don't... get it.

    Steve. Seriously. Are you a real prick or do you just play one in the courtroom?

  7. Apple Communications by Mattygfunk1 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Apple Communications may be small but they are at least providing extremely good value for their broadband service.


    They are one of the VERY few companies offering unlimited broadband downloads in a country full of 3 Gig caps.


    -----


    slashdot needs a google topic catagory

  8. Re:Hmm... by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually the connection is both are in the IT industry and in one industry its bad to have the same name as another company. It actually is possible for people to mistake the telecom company for the computer manufacturer.

    Not to mention that the telecom would indirectly benefit from Apple Inc's advertising...etc.

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  9. Now I understang why Ogg Vorbis by Sri+Lumpa · · Score: 5, Funny


    With names like Ogg and Vorbis it is much easier to establish a trademark given that they are completely invented name (oh! wait! Maybe they are words in another langage?). And given the controversy inside Free Software circles it gives them much marketing for free.

    BTW, on close view I am for Apple on this one, I really think they will win against Apple ;).

    --
    "The obvious mathematical breakthrough would be development of an easy way to factor large prime numbers." Bill Gates,
  10. It's harder than you might think. by Sheetrock · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Just about anything you can easily think of in English is bound to be claimed by someone out there. One-off attempts such as using a generic name appended to another generic name (X-Windows, Apple Telecommunications) are obviously coming under fire by the folks who own the generic names. Even making up something off the top of your head can open you to misfortune, because there are that many businesses out there.

    Zlnasdng Telecommunications? Possible, but it doesn't exactly roll off the tongue...

    --

    Try not. Do or do not, there is no try.
    -- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.




  11. Apple and the "probable name game" by JayBonci · · Score: 5, Informative

    They may neglect to mention a certain Apple Records that they had to pay off to stay in business. From what I have been told, the very famous MacOS sound "SoSuMi" was derived from that experience. "So sue me."

    And how quickly they turn the other cheek.

    They used to be:
    Applecomm.com.au, but on the frontpage there is an announcement regarding the settlement and the change to iGreen.

    I can certainly forgive them for their apples being sour.

    The only upside of this is if Apple Communications would have become an ISP (not entirely far fetched). The name Apple Internet Access or Apple Broadband could certainly be too close for comfort, and would enjoy at least a small amount of probable name association; the very thing these sorts of suits are trying to protect against. It's a tough situation on either end of the boot.

    --jay

  12. WHY so much of this lately? by dpbsmith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This sort of thing seems to be a fairly recent phenomenon--particularly cases in which big corporations go after small local companies in totally different businesses.

    What has changed that suddenly makes it important for big companies to go around breaking butterflies on the wheel?

    Is it just that the Internet makes it easier for big companies to search for and locate small companies with similar names?

    (Anyone remember Infocom having to change the name of their game newsletter, "The New Zork Times" because the New York Times' lawyers said people could confuse the two?)

    1. Re:WHY so much of this lately? by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The growth of the Internet also makes it possible to hear about stories that otherwise might not have been reported stateside. I mean, this was a rather minor case that happened half the world away from the USA, yet it's being reported on a USA-centric site. Just like other news events, we seem to think that the frequency an event happening is the same as the frequency of the media reporting the event. Last year's "increase" in child abductions was such a case, actual cases did not increase, but the rollout of the Amber Alert system in many states gave police a process that notifed all of the local news outlets. Suddenly, child abductions went from a story in segment B of the newscast to a breaking story that disrupted programming. CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News all have deals with groups of local stations take from their coverage, so a local special report can quickly go national on a slow news day. The public sees several reports on child abductions in a short time frame and thinks there's a crisis going on, when really the risk of the tradegy hasn't changed or is being driven down because a once ignored problem is getting so much attention.

  13. I am not a lawyer but by sg3000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple is only obligated to go after trademark infringements by companies that are in similar industries. So, of course, they're not going to go after your local grocery store, carpet cleaning services, towing companies, maid services, or whatever else stuck "Apple" in their name so they'd be in the front of the phone book.

    But a telecommunications company is fair game since Apple does telecommunications. With the convergence of computers and traditional telephony (e.g. VoIP, modems, 2.4 GHz wireless, DSL), the two industries are becoming basically the same thing these days.

    Remember that Apple has one of the top 10 most recognized trademarks, and there are a lot of companies that wish to make some money (through name recognition) off that trademark. At the same time, they hope to mount a sympathy defense by citing how small they are.

    I think he certainly knew what what he was doing when he named his company. I wouldn't be surprised if he hoped that Apple would buy him out to settle the naming rights in Australia (much the same way Microsoft did with "Internet Explorer), but they already had the global naming rights. After that didn't happen, he probably figured a $100,000 settlement is pretty cheap to get nationwide publicity for his company. He gets a newspaper article about him, and the sympathy of misguided trademark-haters around the world.

    --
    Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    1. Re:I am not a lawyer but by MacAndrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You never heard all the proposals for an Apple branded ISP? (I don't remember where that went; maybe they realized they didn't want to be AOL.) .Mac has all the features of a typicals ISP account except the connectivity. And, there's always future expansion to protect.

  14. And the next lawsuit is... by kitzilla · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...going to be over their choice of domain name: iGreen.com.au. These guys must enjoy being in court.

    Internet copyright lawyers are generally iTools about stuff like this.

    --
    This is my post. There are many others like it. If you don't like what you read here, go try one of the others.
  15. Linux and the big time by bgfay · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm concerned that Linux is not going to make it to the big time for one simple reason. While coders are working on the system, developers are writing applications, and the press is writing about Linux, there is no concerted effort by a central group that is pursuing important lawsuits against those who use the word "Linux," the syllable "lin," or the letter L in their product names. Further, the penquins at are zoo are labeled as such without any notice that they are not related to or shareholders of a Linux company. I for one am confused by these misleading names and animals and I am sure that if they aren't stopped, and I mean soon, Linux is sure to fade into obscurity.

    Can't someone do anything about this problem before it's too late? And why isn't Linus leading the legal fight? What's he got that is more important to work on?

    --
    Yeah, I'm as old as my UID would suggest.
  16. And in breaking news..... by bain · · Score: 4, Funny

    Apple computers is sueing New York for $ 100 billion Dollors for using "The Big Apple" to promite the city. A spokes person for Apple (computers) said "New York is obviosly using our good name to lure overpriced high earning apple users to new york and get rid of the bad apples already there"

    As the saying goes. One bad apple spoils the bunch.

    --
    Sanity is a majority vote.
  17. Name making business's by Flamesplash · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A lot of large companies will higher a consulting firm to come up with a name for them.

    NPR had a story about this a couple months ago about how hard it is to come up with a company name now adays. The main problem, as already stated, is that most english words are already taken. So actually finding a meaningful word or combination of words is really really hard.

    When there are no real words left, the firm then gets to make up a word that brings out the values of the company, while not sounding to outlandish. It's actually rather interesting how random sounds put together can make someone thing a particular thing when it has no real basis in english. I'm guessing it's based a lot on roots and prefix's used in english.

    All in all though, such a firm should be responsible for making sure the name is not already taken.

    --
    "Not knowing when the dawn will come, I open every door." - Emily Dickinson
  18. No, better than MS by MacAndrew · · Score: 5, Informative

    I know the attorneys, and the company that employs them, look like assholes when they zealously protect the name -- a reason I couldn't do this kind of work -- but they have to or they'll get screwed in court by someone else. Look at the MS problem with Windows -- Lindows et al. with delicious irony retaliate by attacking all Windows branding. Note that one step in their argument was to submit a list of companies using Window in their name apparently without interference from MS. MS may have blown it, a major catastrophe for them. (Personally I think the name Lindows walks the line of -- a lot of "ordinary people" might reasonably think it's a Microsoft product.) The same could happen to Apple -- every company named Apple could be a nail in the coffin of the trademark.

    As someone here has probably mentioned, Apple had early problems with Apple Records, Lennon's company IIRC, and settled by promising not to get into the music business. They got sued when they started doing MIDI; I'm not sure how that was resolved.

    So, they do come across as assholes, and maybe they are, but they are trying to protect legitimate business interests, not just flex corporate muscle. Pretty much every case looks like intemperate bullshit, but that's how it works because a trademark dies the death of a thousand cuts. Look at cellophane and aspirin and the other famous lapsed trademarks. A protected trademark, unlike copyright, is immortal.

    There are some things about being an 800 lb. gorilla that just have to smell bad. I don't like it -- just check out the sprawling list of reserved names, some not even in use on the Apple site. Microsoft much have an even longer one.

    Anything you don't sue can and will be used against you in a court of law. Branding does protect the consumer, and keeps ripoff artists at bay, but I would welcome a solution to these petty skirmishes. Perhaps it would make sense to license the name out under the right circumstances of honest overlap, without waiver of Apple's primary rights. I don't know whether this is done, though I can imagine some pitfalls.

  19. Re:The original Apple by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 4, Funny
    I guess you've forgotten, but Apple also released some James Taylor, Badfinger, Ravi Shankar, Jackie Lomax, and the Modern Jazz Quartet, as well as, yes, Mary Hopkin.

    As for naming the computer company, well, this was the year when "Kentucky Fried Computer" seemed like a reasonable name, as did "Dr. Dobb's Journal of Computer Calisthenics and Orthodontia". Maybe it was the Bicentennial fever which gripped us all...

    --

    This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

  20. Re:Hmm... by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Actually the connection is both are in the IT industry

    I think most people would regard the telecoms industry as separate to the IT hardware industry actually.

    Not to mention that the telecom would indirectly benefit from Apple Inc's advertising...etc.

    Er, how? Apples advertising is almost all designed to try and sell a very particular type of hardware. That has absolutely no repercussions on sales of bandwidth whatsoever, and assuming that 99% of people can tell the difference between their local bits'n'pieces store and their telephone company, they should also be able to tell the difference between a computer hardware company and a telephone company.

  21. Re:The original Apple by nullard · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Don't forget, Apple Computer was sued by Apple Records over their name. Only when Apple Computer promissed never to enter the recording business were they allowed to keep the name. When the first Macintosh with a microphone shipped, they added a new system alert sound called sosumi. So sue me.

    --


    t'nera semordnilap
  22. Re:Apple loves your money, too... by archen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Woz was SORT of okay? I mean the guy is brilliant, yet very humble. If it weren't for him, there would be no Apple today, yet he still gets paid around $50k a year. If you read about things that Woz has done, like giving his stocks away to other apple empoyees who missed out on the IPO, and teaching computer classes for poor kids you start to realize that Woz is probably a much better guy than most of us (no "sort of" about it).

  23. Re:"so sue me" by Arcturax · · Score: 5, Informative

    No it didn't. It was from the Apple Records case.

    What you are thinking of is when Apple used "Carl Sagan" as an internal code word for a product and the real Carl Sagan sued (or threatened to sue). So they changed it to "BHA" which stood for "Butt Head Astronomer". Sagan then sued (or at least threatened to sue) again and then finally changed it to LAW "Lawyers are Wimps."

    --

    --Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
  24. Legitimate dilution by Theaetetus · · Score: 5, Interesting
    This is exactly what the trademark laws are set up for. Not for Apple Records vs. Apple Computers, or Apple Computers vs. Granny's Apple Stand, or Microsoft Windows vs. Newpro Windows...

    In this case, the average - read

    • not
    a /. reader - would probably mistake Apple Computers and Apple Communications, and think they are related. Some middle-aged couple who knows nothing about computers and own an iMac would be more likely to go to Apple Communications for their internet connection because they think they're the same company.

    To the trademark lawyers, we're a really insignifigant portion of the population - most people really know next to nothing about computers.

    -T

  25. Ah by MacAndrew · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I read a bit of the Bayer site, which says:
    Today, Aspirin® is a registered trademark of Bayer AG in Germany and more than 80 other countries. In countries where Aspirin® is not protected by trademark status, such as the United States, the term Aspirin® can be used generically for all products containing the active substance acetylsalicylic acid. However, genuine Aspirin®, renowned the world over, is only available with the Bayer Cross.

    But this site claims:
    After WWI the trademark was lost by Germany in the USA, UK and France (the victors) where aspirin has entered the language as a generic name. In 1994 Bayer bought back the Bayer Aspirin trademark in the USA from Sterling Drug, who had held it since 1918.

    I suppose it is "Bayer Aspirin" that is trademarked. Interesting.

    And my original point about genericide stands. Try thermos or trampoline or kerosene.
  26. Re:is it just me... by angle_slam · · Score: 5, Informative
    MS can try to get people to stop but because Windows is considered a generic term they can't trademark it so they are more or less blowing smoke.

    It is not a generic term and MS already has a trademark for the name.

    I think there is a fundamental misconception for what generic means. A term can be generic for one type of goods but not generic for another type. For example, apple is generic with respect to produce, but not with respect to computers. Window is generic with respect to transparent glass, but not with respect to operating systems.

    A term is generic if people use the term to refer to an item. For example, people sometimes attempt to use Xerox to refer to photocopying or FedEx to refer to overnight delivery. Those companies thus try very hard to make sure people don't use those names in that manner. Nobody uses the term Windows to generically refer to software. So those who say that the term is generic are mistaken. It is true that windows are a common feature in operating systems, but it is not a common name in operating systems.

    No I am not an IP lawyer

    We can tell.

  27. Apple Auto Glass by Titusdot+Groan · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Apple is well within their rights, both legally and morally to pursue this company -- c'mon they are both in the IT industry!

    Interesting to note that Apple leaves alone people like Apple Auto Glass here in Canada -- different industry!

    We should be more concerned with the ownership of generic words at the DNS level which is the real trademark travesty these days.

  28. Apple had to do it. by litewoheat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The thing about trademarks are you MUST defend them or you will lose them. One instance where you could have reasonably known of the existance of trademark ingringement where you don't defend will strip you of your trademark. Its that simple.

  29. It was a good decision by Now15 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I run a discussion forum which focusses on broadband internet access in Australia.

    The previously named Apple Communications has some really competitive broadband plans, and they are discussed often. However, I have often seen people casually confusing the huge computer company and the micro-Telco.

    This was not a paranoia strike or an over-reaching hand by Apple Computer -- they were being confused. This wasn't apples and oranges, it was apples and apples. Sorry, but I have no sympathy for the previously named Apple Communications.

    Simon Wright
    http://whirlpool.net.au

    --

    Computers are useless: they can only give you answers. -- Pablo Picasso
  30. Re:Sosume by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 4, Funny
    What they don't mention is that when Apple did release the Mac, they named one of the system sounds Sosume /So-sue-me/, basically laughing at Apple recording.
    They also had a prototype of a machine named Sagan , in honour of the astonomer. But it fell on deaf ears, and Carl Sagan promptly sued them. They renamed the prototype BHA , for " Butt-Headed Asstronomer". Sagan sued again, but this time, the courts told him to chill out.