new uses v new users
var docstoc_docid=”156929808″;var docstoc_title=”new uses v new users”;var docstoc_urltitle=”new uses v new users”;
2013
PROFESSIONAL BULL RIDERS v PROFESSIONAL BULL RIDERS
professional bull riders
var docstoc_docid=”156929259″;var docstoc_title=”professional bull riders”;var docstoc_urltitle=”professional bull riders”;
WOODCHUCK CIDER v WOODCHUCK COFFEE
Woodchucks is apparently the name for hardy Vermonters.
woodchuck cider
var docstoc_docid=”156762361″;var docstoc_title=”woodchuck cider”;var docstoc_urltitle=”woodchuck cider”;
VANGUARD LAW GROUP v FLORIDA VANGUARD ATTORNEYS
vanguard law florida
var docstoc_docid=”156760960″;var docstoc_title=”vanguard law florida”;var docstoc_urltitle=”vanguard law florida”;
Who Boots An Ambulance?
No, really, who puts a traffic boot on an ambulance? Defendant allegedly puts a traffic boot on an ambulance parked in its lot (while the EMS were attending to someone in defendant’s store), and there is unauthorized infringing sign in the background. See the complaint at para. 74 for the story (and photo). Plaintiff sells…
LAWYERFINDER v LAWYERFINDER.COM
Decision regarding venue in dispute over LAWYERFINDER. Defendant is Columbus Bar Association.
lawyerfinder v lawyerfinder
var docstoc_docid=”156440082″;var docstoc_title=”lawyerfinder v lawyerfinder”;var docstoc_urltitle=”lawyerfinder v lawyerfinder”;
Last Few Days Twitter Feed Wrap-up
Perfect 10 Gets a Surprising Partial Sumary Judgment in 512 Case– bit.ly/12ng6EM
— TrademarkBlog (@TrademarkBlog) May 12, 2013
Beyond Unlocking: Don’t Let Them Kill the First Reasonable Copyright Reform Bill | Wired bit.ly/10jesE9
— TrademarkBlog (@TrademarkBlog) May 12, 2013
Want to check the status of a #NewgTLDs application? Just click here: goo.gl/aEaSl #ICANN
— ICANN
…
Yale v Yale Academy
yale v yale
var docstoc_docid=”156152472″;var docstoc_title=”yale v yale”;var docstoc_urltitle=”yale v yale”;
Text of J.T. Colby v Apple (iBOOK)
Plaintiff’s predecessor in interest adopted the mark iBooks for both physical books and ebooks in 1999. It had some success, and had annual sales of up to $2 million by 2005. Its trademark application however had been rejected on descriptiveness and mis-descriptiveness grounds. In 2006 the CEO of predecessor died in a car accident, plunging…
A Conversation on Twitter Today Regarding Band Names
Who were the first musicians to use suggestive or arbitrary group names?Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five?
— TrademarkBlog (@TrademarkBlog) May 9, 2013
@legallysocial @trademarkblog Jelly Roll Morton.1905
— Elizabeth King (@ElizabethKing) May 9, 2013
@elizabethking @legallysocial He wrote Jelly Roll Blues in 05 but didn’t perform as Jelly Roll then.But
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