Christopher Self <
[email protected]> wrote:
In article <[email protected]>, Chris Evans (CJE/4D) <[email protected]> wrote:
Trademarks and Acorn Software.
A RISC OS Software company that has long since exited the RISC OS market trademarked their name. The company (and trademark?) has changed hands
at least once since[1] The trademark (possibly with IPR) has been sold
to a company that is now using the original name. They have had ebay
cancel listings of ours for software we bought new direct from the
original company claiming we are infringing their trademark.
Any ideas if they right? or pointers to relevant information please.
They are not right.
I think the problem here is ebay are extremely trigger happy where
trademarks are concerned:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/help/policies/listing-policies/selling-policies/intellectual-property-vero-program?id=4349
https://pages.ebay.com/seller-center/listing-and-marketing/verified-rights-owner-program.html
There is an email address:
[email protected]
Examples of infringements
Items that bear the rights owner's trademark—such as a logo—but were not
authorized by the rights owner.
I would make the case that the original rights owner *has* authorised the
items Chris is selling, because at the time they manufactured and sold them. That the trademark has since been sold on does not invalidate the right of resale.
For example, Rover Cars is now defunct - but it doesn't mean the current
rights owner (BMW) can prevent me from selling an old Rover as a Rover. It just prevents me making a new car and calling it a Rover.
People claiming to be Polaroid or Debenhams are breaching our right to Freedom Of Thought And Conscience; they are lying, which is illegal.
They can't claim to be Polaroid or Debenhams any more than I can change my name to Chris Evans and claim to be THE Chris Evans from CJE Micros (not
even after you'ved been dead for an hour or so.)
No, the trademark for Polaroid was resold to (a complex history of) holding companies, who licence it out for slapping on products. You're free to talk
or think about taking Polaroids, but not sell cameras or toasters and call
them Polaroid. To all intents and purposes that company *is* Polaroid, insomuch as they have acquired the rights to the brand and named their
company such, even if not a continuation in the Companies House sense.
A bit like BMW bought the Mini brand and factory. They make cars and call
them Mini, despite not being made by Rover/Austin/British Leyland/BMC any
more. At roughly the same time BMW bought the Rolls Royce brand but not the factory, so they had to build their own factory - but they're still Rolls Royces.
Trademarks are intellectual property and can be bought and sold like other
IPR.
Theo
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