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Court Rules the "Google" Trademark Isn't Generic

ericgoldman writes Even though "googling" and "Google it" are now common phrases, a federal court ruled that the "Google" trademark is still a valid trademark instead of a generic term (unlike former trademarks such as escalator, aspirin or yo-yo). The court distinguished between consumers using Google as a verb (such as "google it"), which didn't automatically make the term generic, and consumers using Google to describe one player in the market, which 90%+ of consumers still do.

6 of 159 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Don't google it. Bing it! by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 5, Funny

    BING
    IS
    NOT
    GOOGLE

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  2. Re:Lucky them by wisnoskij · · Score: 5, Informative

    That is how the word is used now, and the summery even states that the ruling takes this into account. They know that googleing is a generic word, but Google is not. A search engine is not called a google, only Google is called Google. This does not change just because googleing is a generic term for performing a internet searching.

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  3. Re:Well, if you're going to push... by TWX · · Score: 5, Insightful

    More to the point, when people use, "Google," as a verb, they mean to actually use Google, as opposed to using any brand of facial tissue available when saying, "Kleenex."

    Besides, if Coca-Cola can retain, "Coke," as a trademark when vast portions of the country refer to basic soft carbonated soda drinks of any type as, "coke," then I don't think that those challenging Gogole's trademark have much of a chance.

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  4. Re: Don't google it. Bing it! by darkain · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Fun fact. Check the reverse DNS of any Google server IP address, and it'll probably reside under xxxx.1e100.net

  5. Re:Well, if you're going to push... by RenderSeven · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Take some Aspirin, too.

    Interestingly the trademark 'aspirin' (and the trademark 'heroin') was taken from Bayer AG and made generic as part of the war reparations from WWI. Outside of the major WW1 allied powers, 'aspirin' is still a trademark of Bayer.

  6. Aspirin by Adrian+Harvey · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As a pedant, I'd like to note that aspirin did not become a generic as a result of its mass usage nor as the result of a court case, but was part of war reparations with Germany. See here for more detail, or just google it :-)