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The US patent system

edited 2012-02-08 15:36:25 in General
No rainbow star
This patent on things such as online video should have never happened

Seriously, US, what the fuck? I wonder how long it will be before other countries just outright refuse to recognize patents in the US? Because at this rate it's the only thing that will make the god damned idiots go, "Hmm... Maybe we should change our system?"

Comments

  • OOOooooOoOoOOoo, I'm a ghoOooOooOOOost!

    US patent law is pretty bad.


    That said, I think our trademark law says that if you don't protect your trademark, you lose it. I dunno if patent law works the same, but if it does, this asshole is out of luck.

  • edited 2012-02-08 20:24:05

    Protecting your trademark is so loosely defined, it's not exactly hard.


     


    Heck, if you'd trademarked a character's name (Like say, Hasbro tradmarking a Transformer's name), using it somewhere (like in a dialogue, once, in a story he does not appear in, on another toy's packaging) counts as using your trademark...


     


    On the OP... I almost want to shake this guy's hand and salute him.

  • OOOooooOoOoOOoo, I'm a ghoOooOooOOOost!

    Yeah, but it's not just using it. You have to actively prevent other people from using it.

  • No rainbow star
    ^ Which is kind of stupid

    Maybe I don't mind x company mentioning y character. So why should that mean that I can't protect y from z company making it into some sort of feces fetishizing character that ends up hurting my works due to people connecting the two?
  • OOOooooOoOoOOoo, I'm a ghoOooOooOOOost!

    I think it has to get out-of-hand before it takes effect. I.e. if another company had a major character in the same genre with the same name for awhile without you acting on it.

  • No rainbow star
    ^ ...And I should care about that?

    Or is it that companies can't copyright, say, a hyperactive kid named Bob?
  • edited 2012-02-08 21:51:03
    OOOooooOoOoOOoo, I'm a ghoOooOooOOOost!

    A hyperactive kid named bob could reasonably be considered a coincidence. But if your crime drama features a mob boss named Tony Soprano (beyond just a quick jokey reference), then HBO's going to send you a cease and desist.

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