The Indelible Bonobo Experience

Renaissance Monkey: in-depth expertise in Jack-of-all-trading. I mostly comment on news of interest to me and occasionally engage in debates or troll passive-aggressively. Ask or Submit 2 mah authoritah! ;) !

As part of one of its stories, the Montreal Gazette ran a photo of Mr. Magnotta prominently featuring him holding a bottle of Labatt Blue. In an effort to distance its brand, Labatt Brewers of Canada’s legal team threatened legal action unless the photo was taken down, which sparked a rash of discussion on social media. (It has since issued a statement saying it has dropped the matter.)

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..yet another example of the streissand effect :)

This is a reminder that beyond economics, there’s a substantial freedom issue involved in these intellectual property cases. It’s conceivable that if Steele were to try to litigate this that he’d ultimately prevail on first amendment grounds. But in practice that would be very expensive, so any firm large enough to have lawyers on retainer has a lot of latitude to intimidate people with cease-and-desist letters (via Freedom and Intellectual Property)
And yet this kind of thing never seems to make it into things like an Index of Economic Freedom or get denounced as a form of tyranny. But by even the narrowest negative liberty conception of freedom, a law saying that you can’t print a T-shirt with a “BARVES” logo on it is a substantial restriction of liberty.

This is a reminder that beyond economics, there’s a substantial freedom issue involved in these intellectual property cases. It’s conceivable that if Steele were to try to litigate this that he’d ultimately prevail on first amendment grounds. But in practice that would be very expensive, so any firm large enough to have lawyers on retainer has a lot of latitude to intimidate people with cease-and-desist letters (via Freedom and Intellectual Property)

  • And yet this kind of thing never seems to make it into things like an Index of Economic Freedom or get denounced as a form of tyranny. But by even the narrowest negative liberty conception of freedom, a law saying that you can’t print a T-shirt with a “BARVES” logo on it is a substantial restriction of liberty.
In the United States, you get automatic trademark rights in your brand just by virtue of using it. There’s nothing special you have to do

When You Need a Trademark and, or Copyright | Fox Small Business Center

It’s worth knowing the basics of Trademarks and Copyrights in USA. According to Fox Business,

  • A small business owner typically does not have to register his or her trademark if operating in a small geographic area. But with the proliferation of e-commerce, if one is selling their product over the Internet to other states or regions, the trademark protection becomes more important.
  • “These days, everybody’s on the Internet, which, in my opinion, makes getting a federal registration more important,” Atkins said. “Probably the neatest benefit of getting a registration is it expands the geographic area throughout the state or the country, depending on what kind of registration you get.” 
  • It typically costs between $275 and $325 to register each mark with the USPTO, plus lawyer fees if you retain counsel to help with the process. If you have to choose between registering your company’s name or your trademark because of a tight budget, Atkins recommends registering the name since you receive broader rights.
  • Trademark protection from the USPTO, however, does not mean your trademark is protected overseas. You have to register your trademark in the countries in which you desire to do business to be protected there.
  • Trademarks protect words, names, symbols, sounds, or colors that distinguish goods and services from those manufactured or sold by others and to indicate the source of the goods. You don’t necessarily have to register your trademark with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), but you can benefit from it. U.S. trademarks can last forever, as long as the trademark is used in commerce and defended against infringement.
  • According to the U.S. Copyright office, copyrights protect original works of authorship including literary, dramatic, musical, and artistic works, such as poetry, novels, movies, songs, computer software and architecture. This can include things like HTML or other code that programs specific Web sites. Copyright does not protect facts, ideas, systems, or methods of operation, although it may protect the way these things are expressed. For small business’ Web sites, copyright protects all original authorship on the Web site - writings, artwork, pictures, and other elements. Although registering your copyright is not required, it is recommended. It’s particularly important for you to register your copyright if you’re in a business that is creative.
  • “Like trademark law, you get automatic copyright protection. Meaning, if you write it down and it’s original enough, nobody can copy it without your permission,” Atkins said. “Copyright protects against copying of original expression but the expression has got to be at least minimally original.”
  • But you do need to register your copyright with the U.S. Copyright Office in order to enforce it in court. It costs about $35 to register and you can do it online. It often takes about one year to issue the registration, but you can get registered faster by paying a higher fee.
  • “When you launch your Web site, get it registered. Not only can you immediately enforce your rights against copycats but the copyright law gives you two other things: That is the rights to seek attorney fees and statutory damages,” Atkins explained. That way, you don’t have to prove out-of-pocket loss if infringement occurred after registration was issued.
  • According to the USPTO, copyright protection is for a limited term. For works created after January 1, 1978, copyrights last for 70 years after the death of their owner. For works made for hire -covering the usual type of work owned by a small business - the copyright lasts for 95 years from the year of its first publication, or a term of 120 years from the year of its creation, whichever expires first.