Inverizon is a Missouri company providing agricultural services. When Bell Atlantic announced that it was adopting VERIZON as a housemark, Inverizon got in line and sent Verizon a demand letter. After Verizon responded, Inverizon left Verizon on indefinite hold. The Declaratory Judgment Act is intended to end such limbos so Verizon filed a DJ action
August 2002
Transportation Choices Coalition vs. Transportation Choices Intiiative
This Seattle article reports a lawsuit by one political action group against another, over use of the term TRANSPORTATION CHOICES.
Location, Location, Location
The firm of Lyon and Lyon is closing. Among its notable achievements was obtaining patent protection for many of the early electric guitars, and a Fender Stratocaster was proudly displayed in its offices. A last-ditch merger effort failed. I was struck by the sentence in the law.com account that the “stumbling block was Lyon’s ‘very significant…
Joint Venture Forth Warily
The Wall St. Journal, the NY Times and MSNBC are reporting tensions between Rosie O’Donnell and Gruner + Jahr, her co-venturer in publishing ROSIE Magazine (the re-named re-positioned McCALLS (see background)).
If the parties’ can’t resolve their differences, bu someone wants to continue the magazine, what should it be named? This illustrates an unplesant…
A Predictable Climax To Salon's Blog Experiment
The blogosphere had this coming. As Justice Thomas once said: “I can’t define obscenity, but I know it when I buy it.” Ok, he didn’t really say that.
Linkless
More on linking, or in this case, sites which prohibit linking.
One of These Things Is Not Like The Others
Here is Green Turtle Bay’s Sun design, here is Kellogg’s SUNNY logo, here’s the Aztec Sun Calendar, here’s the article on the dispute (now apparently dropped) between Kellogg and the Green Turtle.
Spawn Defeats Tony Twist in Theory of Publicity/Defamation Case
Todd McFarlane created the Spawn comic book, movie, tv show, etc. A hockey fan, McFarlane admittedly named a character, a bad guy, Anthony ‘Tony Twist’ Twistelli, after a real-life hockey player. Merely the name was used, not likeness or biographical data. In other words, other than the fact that both are violent, the character was…
Shameless Self-Promotion
Not a ground-breaking decision, but allow me this indulgence of linking to a STOP decision where I represented the prevailing party.
Bears of Very Little Brains
An account of a rights dispute involving Disney over Winnie the Pooh from LAMag.com. Thanks to Bag and Baggage for this.