Beatles Beaten By A Moron In A Hurry
from the first-france,-now-london,-apple-completes-the-euro-sweep dept
The long running Apple vs. Apple trademark battle has come to a close, with Apple computer prevailing over the Beatles' record label, Apple Corp. The judge in the case ruled that Apple's logo does not resemble that of Apple Corp., and that iTunes isn't technically a music store, but rather a data transmission service. A 1991 agreement between the two companies specifically allowed for data transmission and the judge deserves credit for understanding what iTunes truly is. Hopefully more people will recognize that laws regulating specific kinds of media are outmoded in an era when it can all be broken down into indistinguishable streams of data. The ruling is also a victory for the "moron in a hurry" defense, which should be applied to more trademark cases, when plaintiffs claim the possibility of confusion.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Great!
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Really, why should I *care*?
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Re:
But, the Walrus was Paul.
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OK, Never knew the Bettles has an Apple....
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Love the beatles, Glad they lost
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soon to be overturned
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Re: Love the beatles, Glad they lost
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Wait a minute
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iTunes isn't a music store?
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Why are people happy about this?
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Re: Why are people happy about this?
People are happy because the judge ruled correctly that the iTunes is a data transmission service and not a music store. This is fairly important distinction when it comes to e-commerce matters.
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Re: Re: Why are people happy about this?
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Word association
I think that both parties should realise that if they would just agree to let iTunes sell Beatles songs, both of them could make a lot of money. Right now, the Beatles songs on my iPod are taken from CDs borrowed from the library. That means that I did not pay for them. That's right, NOBODY MADE ANY MONEY! I would much rather buy the songs off iTunes then go to the library's site, request the CD, wait for it to be delivered from some remote library out in Berne or some crazy nowhere place, go to the library, pick it up, copy the songs, and take the CD back. At a buck a song, mostly made up of gift certificates given for birthdays/Chistmas, I would rather sit at home and wait a minute or two for it to download, and then play the song while on the way to the library to pick up a Led Zeppelin CD.
And as a note: I don't consider this illegal, because I could always go get the CD from the library and listen to it. Even so, I'll probably be getting a call from RIAA tonight.:P
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Problem solved.
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Re: Why are people happy about this?
If they were a data transmission service 99 cents is what you would pay for the bandwidth to download data, in this case music which would then be free.
Instead, 99 cents is the retail price of a product. Of which Apple Computer pays a reported wholesale price of 70 cents.
It may not be CDs and tapes, but it is still a product. The RIAA says so.
This is INDEED a business model for a store not a transmission service.
Apple Computers is distributing music at a handsome profit because of the iPod.
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Re: Re: Why are people happy about this?
As for "The Beatles" suing...that is simply not true. I seriously doubt Paul and Ringo had anything to do with this lawsuit other than being told about it. This was a corporate lawyer justifying his existence.
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got one thing right
still, itunes would be lucky to have Beatles music to download. somehow, i don't think that is going to happen anytime soon. and it isn't hurting Beatles sales one whit. yoko ono is probably laughing all the way to the bank.
apple corps began in 1967 or 1968, i think. pity that apple corp, with all of its amazing original contributions to the world, couldn't use its great creativity to pick a different name and avoid all of this altogether. those of you who weren't eating baby food (or even gestating) during the end of the reagan administration probably know this. apple corps was a well-known brand. if you're lucky/old enough to own r e c o r d s (you may remember them, little plastic disks, skipped, not the "perfect" sound of CDs but still had a certain warmth in the sound that CDs lack) you would have seen the granny smith apple at the center of all Apple Records, including those of the Beatles. (others recorded on Apple as well, but you're probably too young and bored for that trivia.)
anyway, paul and ringo probably had nothing to do with this suit. it isn't like either of them need the cash.
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