New Legal Threat To GMail
wellington writes "Google is facing a renewed threat of legal action from a company that claims to own the intellectual property rights to its GMail e-mail service. Independent International Investment Research, a British company that specialises in research and has several leading City investment banks as clients, argues that it launched "G-Mail web based email" in May 2002."
Google's is called GMail BETA
So they claim that they own the G?
Google should give them 50% of the profits from GMail.
Let's see, a free email service generating $0 profit. 50% of $0 equals $0.
Settled.
I've actually already patented the use of single letters in front of "Mail", so they're both screwing me over.
AMAil
BMail
CMail
DMail
etc.
ALL MINE!
Yeah, I'm Amazon.com. This whole "Dopefish" thing is just an alias.....
Surely this is just trademark infringment at most. The summary seems to infer that general IP rights to the service are involved, rather than just the name.
Steve Ballmer hires a minion to launch the first volley in the Internet War of 2005
Sounds like they have a legitimate claim here... They did launch a web-based email service called GMail well before Google. The fact that they've been negotiating with Google for the past 15 months would indicate that they also brought their claim to Google early on. I wonder why Google hasn't just paid them to license the name? Wouldn't they rather use some of their excess money reserves than risk a tarnished name?
And they did register that trademark long in advance of Google.
Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
Wow, yet another vague summary, that can definitely be misleading. Having first read the summary, I thought it was about a company claiming to have created the code and/or services of Gmail only to have google steal it. But no, the company is merely sueing for trademark infringement. Way to go slashdot! The word "TRADEMARK" could have been mentioned somewhere in the article, would have cleared it up a tiny bit. But I guess Slashdot gets more pageviews (and ad views) by confusing its readers.
I heard that Google is planning on calling it's personalized homepage GSpot...
If you RTFA, you will see that the company is a small company, and was involved in communication with google over the span of 15 months or so, before jumping right into litigation. That sounds like the right thing to do, IMO, rather than just sue immediately. The company is a small one, and they say they don't have the big money that Google has to bring a law suit just to protect their name.
-Jesse
Nothing says "unprofessional job" like wrinkles in your duct tape.
The summary for this story is another good example of why the phrase 'intellectual property' should be avoided.
The company does not 'claim to own the intellectual property to GMail'. It has a trademark claim. This is completely different and unrelated to any copyright interest, patent held, or trade secret. Lumping them all together as 'intellectual property' which can then be 'infringed' in some vague way just muddies the issue.
-- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
"I feel it is up to me as the founder and the major shareholder. We're not going to sit on the sidelines while a company uses our intellectual property rights," he said. "We're confident that we have the funding available to us and we're girding our loins," he said.
As much as they may have a case, I always find the "we don't want to, but they are forcing us" argument funny. Not because of the company itself, but because I can imagine some IP lawyers saying, "Yesss! They are being forccced to! Hisss!" as their forked tongues flick from their mouths and they rub thier greedy paws together with reptilian glint in their eyes.
Similar to the upcoming US election results
But they never bother spending the $10 to register gmail.com?
'Nobody snuggles with Max Power. You strap yourself in and feel the "G"s!'
"We're not going to sit on the sidelines while a company uses our intellectual property rights"
Has anyone even heard of these idiots?
YOU PUT A G IN FRONT OF MAIL.
Don't try to act like it's the light bulb, you snaggletoothed limey.
This lawsuit has been brought to the attention of your lawyers by the letter G, and the numbers 0 and 5.
Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
There is nothing called "Intellectual Property".
Either you say:
Trademark
Copyright
Patent
But "Intellectual Property" is not a term you can use intelligently, only as a way to further the company propaganda-machine. This example clearly shows it is not suitable for intelligent readership. I heard this from RMS last time he visited Norway.
'mail' is a generic term. G is just a letter, devoid of any meaning beyond a possible abbreviation. In this case, it's a legitimate abbreviation for 'Google'. This reminds me of IBM trying to trademark the number 2 to stop vendors from making PS/2 compatible computers called "PC/2" They lost. Intel tried to trademark the number 386 & 486. They also lost. I'm not a google apologist or anything, but I think the litigants don't have a case
Except that all the email addresses end with "@gmail.com." If google changed it to "@google.mail.com" or some similar name, everyone with a gmail account would have to change their email address.
I could write a program to combine suffix/prefix combos to common words like "mail", "net", "service", "video", "sound", "conference"
Then sue everyone 3 years afterwards?
The fact they never even bought a domain name for the service [or advertised it broadly] suggests they're not seriously impacted by Googles actions because it's their own ineptitude that crippled any chance of making it big.
Tom
Someday, I'll have a real sig.
Oh, that's right. Money. I'm guessing it went like this:
Also, I'm kind of miffed that this keeps getting called an "intellectual property struggle". G'fuh? I remember back in the old days, we used to call them "trademark disputes". I wasn't aware that changing the first letter of a well-known contraction for "electronic mail" was a rigorous intellectual task. If that's your claim to fame, you're an idiot.
--- What
...humans have a HUGE oral tradition.
I sure wish I could get some of that oral tradition...
I'll turn into a supernova and burn up everything. Well I'll turn into a black little hole and you'll turn into string.
it is not funny, it is sad truth here in germany
Conservatism: The fear that somewhere, somehow, someone you think is your inferior is being treated as your equal.
IIIR has no website which can be located by Google, Yahoo, or any other search engine that I've used.
All that comes up are some investor reports like OneSource, which reports them as having a whole seven employees.
Trademarks are not automatically international, and the mere presence of the "G" before "Mail" is not a trademark. Trademarks are either specific spellings (with/without hyphens), logos, icons, color combinations, etc.
The lawsuit sounds like basic "trolling for dollars", legal style.
I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
Irritable, left-wing and possibly humorous bumper stickers and t-shirts
I am John William Babbittworth, of the law firm Thompson, Richards, Williamson, Heresford, Babbittworth, Jones and Spencer law firm.
We represent the interests of Independent International Investment Research, which has exclusive trademark rights to all words beginning by the letter "G"...
The IP in question is a trademark (awful journalism banging on about 'owning the intellectual property rights to the GMail service'). I take it you think Linus is an IP hoarder too, because Linux is trademarked.
This seems like a perfectly straightforward trademark dispute to me. No glaring flaws in this area of intellectual property law that I can see. This kind of dispute does not deserve to be lumped in with the ridiculous patents and copyright excesses we've seen.
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According to the US Patent and Trademark Office, the "GMAIL" mark has been assigned to Google, who applied for the mark on April 2nd, 2004. The Trustees of the "Smith Trust", Shane Smith and Karen Griffith, applied for the same "GMAIL" trademark on April 3rd, 2004, one day after Google Inc. The "Smith Trust" has not been assigned the trademark by the US PTO, and the latest rejection of their application was June 11th, 2005.
s no=78395746e ntry=78395931
Perhaps someone else can post the equivalent info from the UK?
See Google's GMAIL trademark assignment:
http://assignments.uspto.gov/assignments/q?db=tm&
and the Smith Trust's application status: (rejected)
http://tarr.uspto.gov/servlet/tarr?regser=serial&