Re: Watch out Ar 308 makers and smiths
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Broker</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: hlee</div><div class="ubbcode-body">This does not seem to be a problem for Kleenex, Johnson & Johnson (Band-Aid), or Xerox. Why would it be a problem for Armalite? </div></div>
Tissue paper, bandages, and copy machine paper aren't trademarked so what's your point? The question isn't whether or not the company name is being used commonly to describe a product but the actual product itself. Your point would only be relevant if people went in and asked for an Armalite to describe a 308 model semi-auto. </div></div>
You are wrong. AR-10 is a registered trademark. Kleenex is a registered trademark. Q-tip is a registered trademark. Band-Aid is a registered trademark. They all enjoy the same legal protection. Only the legal owner of a trademark can mark their products with the trademark.
Maybe I am the only one that calls facial tissue Kleenex...
I could be the only one that calls all cotton swabs Q-tips...
It is possible that I missed the memo that all photocopiers are not Xerox machines...
And, when either of my sons has a scrape, they ask me for a Band-Aid, not an adhesive bandage...
Maybe, just maybe, it is just us. I highly doubt it...
From Wikipedia..."The registered trademark symbol, designated by ® (the circled capital letter "R"), is a symbol used to provide notice that the preceding mark is a trademark or service mark that has been registered with a national trademark office.[1] In some countries it is against the law to use the registered trademark symbol for a mark that is not officially registered in any country.[1]
Trademarks not officially registered are instead marked with the trademark symbol ™, while unregistered service marks are marked with the service mark symbol ℠. The proper manner to display these symbols is immediately following the mark, and is commonly in superscript style but is not legally required."
I wend into my bathroom and took a couple pictures of items I found there. They are below...
See the little Circle R next to the name? That means registered trademark. Yes, it is the company name in one instance, but it is also a trademark. What were we discussing? Oh yes, Armalite's AR-10 registered trademark.
Kleenex is synonymous with facial tissue.
Q-tip is synonymous with cotton swab.
Xerox is synonymous with photocopiers.
AR-10 is synonymous with 308 caliber semi-auto black rifles.
Kleenex is a registered trademark owned by the Kleenex Company.
Q-tip is a registered trademark owned by the Unilever company.
Xerox is a registered trademark owned by the Xerox Corporation.
AR-10 is a registered trademark owned by Armalite.
Am I the only one who sees the parallelism?
Interestingly, I found this at the bottom of the Q-tips website...
"Q-TIPS® is a registered trademark of Unilever and is NOT a name for just any cotton swabs. The Q-TIPS® trademark can only be used to refer to the specific cotton swab products manufactured and sold by Unilever and should not be used to refer to cotton swab products of other companies or to cotton swabs generally. Appropriate generic terminology for cotton swabs includes the terms "cotton", "stick(s)" and "swab(s)". Misuse of the Q-TIPS® trademark constitutes an infringement of Unilever's exclusive rights in the mark."
Maybe I am not the only one who was in the dark...