It may seem trivial and I never liked Yoko Ono, but Apple Macintosh were quite pigshit thick to use such a name given how Apple Corp. owns them every time in court.
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Moderator: Edi
Apple Records have a legally binding contract that Apple Computer are clearly violating, so I assume that the judge will rule in Apple Records' favor. However, forcing Apple Computer to stop selling iPods and music online would be absurd, and any sensible judge should know that.phongn wrote:No, you couldn't, David. Prior art applies there, even for trademarks.
When Apple Computer was first founded, Apple Records had a trademark and feared that there would be consumer confusion between the two. After suing, Apple Computer entered into a lifetime agreement not to become a music distributor.
Move forward a couple decades. Apple begins selling the iPod and iTunes Music Service goes online. This is in violation of the agreement, AR is going to sue. IMHO, it's quite stupid - no-one is going to confuse the two, but Apple Records has the advantage.
Who's "Macintosh"? I was unaware that such a company existed. Apple Computer makes the Macintosh, but Macs aren't the company.Admiral Valdemar wrote:Not gonna happen, and if anything legal comes into it, Apple Records have Macintosh by the balls.kojikun wrote:Apple Computer should buy Apple Records. They're clearly tiny, I've never heard of them outside of this lawsuit and relations to the Beatles.
Using that to differentiate the two, Apple Corps. and Apple Macintosh. Like Remington Firearms and Remington Shavers.Durandal wrote:Who's "Macintosh"? I was unaware that such a company existed. Apple Computer makes the Macintosh, but Macs aren't the company.Admiral Valdemar wrote:Not gonna happen, and if anything legal comes into it, Apple Records have Macintosh by the balls.kojikun wrote:Apple Computer should buy Apple Records. They're clearly tiny, I've never heard of them outside of this lawsuit and relations to the Beatles.
Muhuwahaha! Brilliant! I love legality when it benefits the right people.Lord MJ wrote:All Apple Computer has to do is spin Itunes of into a separate corporation called Itunes wholly owned by Apple Computer and then they would no longer be infringing on the contract since ITunes would be in the music business, Apple wouldn't be.
The company name is "Apple Computer," not "Apple Macintosh."Admiral Valdemar wrote:Using that to differentiate the two, Apple Corps. and Apple Macintosh. Like Remington Firearms and Remington Shavers.
Yeah but I "think different".Durandal wrote:The company name is "Apple Computer," not "Apple Macintosh."Admiral Valdemar wrote:Using that to differentiate the two, Apple Corps. and Apple Macintosh. Like Remington Firearms and Remington Shavers.
By the way, the "i" apps use lower-case i's (i.e. "iTunes" or "iMovie") not upper-case one.
They might be able to pull that off now, but the Apple brand name is an exceptionally powerful one. It might be counterproductive to make this move.Lord MJ wrote:All Apple Computer has to do is spin Itunes of into a separate corporation called Itunes wholly owned by Apple Computer and then they would no longer be infringing on the contract since ITunes would be in the music business, Apple wouldn't be.
I'd support this. Apple Computers clearly broke that agreement and theyDurandal wrote: This situation is a little different, however. Apple are actually selling music online, and the Apple Records lawyers might be assholes and try to get an injunction
It was a moronic agreement in the first place. iTunes Music Service is an Apple service, and it will remain that way. The fact that Apple Records have not filed for an injunction yet should be enough to tell anyone that they're running low on cash. Furthermore, iTMS has been around for a few months now, and it has the blessings of the record labels. It won't be going anywhere, especially when it becomes accessible to Windows users at the end of the year.MKSheppard wrote:I'd support this. Apple Computers clearly broke that agreement and they deserve to be taken to "pound me up the ass" settlement court by Apple Records which will probably involve shuttign down iTunes or spinning it off into a separately controlled corportation, completely independent of Apple Computers.Durandal wrote:This situation is a little different, however. Apple are actually selling music online, and the Apple Records lawyers might be assholes and try to get an injunction
ITunes could still market itself in a way so that everyone knows that it is an Apple business. But legally it will be a separate corporation so Applie Records will not be able to take any action since Apple Computer wouldn't be running the business, it is a separate entity with no contracts with Apple Records.phongn wrote:They might be able to pull that off now, but the Apple brand name is an exceptionally powerful one. It might be counterproductive to make this move.Lord MJ wrote:All Apple Computer has to do is spin Itunes of into a separate corporation called Itunes wholly owned by Apple Computer and then they would no longer be infringing on the contract since ITunes would be in the music business, Apple wouldn't be.