Chicago Law Firm Sues Over Hyperlink To Trademarked Name
TheSpoom writes "Large Chicago law firm Jones Day are suing internet startup BlockShopper over the issue of whether linking to a business with their trademarked name should be legal. It would seem they are using trademark dilution as a tool to get BlockShopper to cease linking to their website. The EFF has filed an amicus curiae, as might be expected. If Jones Day wins this suit, anyone linking using a trademarked name may be in legal hot water."
Jones Day(TM) is going to have to get in line. SCO has existing use claims on linking litigious bastards, based on their extensive use of the mark between 2002 through present.
It's too bad the legal system isn't more accessible to the common man or baseless suits with intent to crush or scare wouldn't get filed so often.
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
Man, cant the lawyers fight something that is more useful, like crooked Wall Street firms? What a waste of the court's resources.
So, let's get this straight. You'd like people to be attracted to your business, but you don't want them to use your Name....
Kind of defeats the point in having a website, really.
"She's furniture with a pulse"
Large Chicago law firm Jones Day are suing internet startup BlockShopper over the issue of whether linking to a business with their trademarked name should be legal.
Yes, it should be.
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Trademarks exist to differentiate businesses. You have an ABSOLUTE RIGHT to use somebody else's trademark to refer to them or describe their product. Any law that says otherwise is fundamentally flawed, and violates the first amendment.
A trademark is a name, and names are fundamental to speech.
No doubt. If I, for some reason, had this law firm on retainer I would be looking for a new firm already. This whole fisasco has to make one question the firms grasp of technology and law. Worse, it makes it clear that they lack any forethought. Right or wrong, what did they think was going to happen when they filed this suit? Did they not think that it would end up plastered all over the internet?
If I were one of their clients I would be questioning their judgment right now.
"In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson
Its not invasion of privacy to post publicly available information on the internet.
The purchase and sale of property is a mater of public record and are generally listed in the classified section of your local news paper. Taking that information and combining it with the results of a google search on the buyer or sellers name is certainly not invasion of privacy, though it might make you re-think the kind of info you put on line.
Im still not quite sure what the point of the web site is though.
"In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson