Candy Crush Maker King.com Has Trademarked 'Candy' For Games
An anonymous reader writes ""King.com, owners of Candy Crush, have received a U.S. trademark on the use of the word 'candy' in games and clothing. Forbes thinks it is overly broad. 'One would think Hasbro, the maker of that venerable children's board game (which does have video game versions) Candy Land, would already have this trademark sewed up.'" According to an update on the story, the company also has a EU trademark on the same term, but (however much comfort this is) is enforcing its claims only selectively, as against a game called All Candy Casino Slots – Jewel Craze Connect: Big Blast Mania Land.
Except that it is a common word for computer games: http://www.mobygames.com/searc...
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
Yeah but the context is monopolies on words. We've no problems with made up words, the problems are people stopping us from using words that they didn't make up in the first place.
Try to keep up.
It's registration number 85842584.
Thank you for the registration number. It's unbelievable USPTO would allow a trademark 1) on a dictionary word, 2) on such a broad base of categories, 3) when other products already use the word. But it's true.
Do any of you actually know what a trademark is? A trademark isn't just the word, it includes the color, the font, the background, etc.
Not necessarily. In this instance, as per the USPTO here: http://tsdr.uspto.gov/#caseNum..., the trademark itself is indeed just the word CANDY. Relevant information is copied below:
Mark Information
Mark Literal Elements: CANDY
Standard Character Claim: Yes. The mark consists of standard characters without claim to any particular font style, size, or color.