Frugalista! Frugalista! Frugalista! Now... Where's My Cease And Desist?
from the this-is-getting-silly dept
The term "frugalista" is apparently quite popular, such that the word has even been defined by the Oxford English Dictionary. There are a bunch of bloggers who write about "frugal living" who refer to themselves as "frugalistas." It was a nice little community... until a trademark claim entered into the mess. William alerts us to the news that a blogger (who established her blog long after the word was in common usage) has trademarked the term and is having her lawyer send cease-and-desist letters to other bloggers who refer to themselves as frugalistas. A US News reporter asked the woman's lawyer how it could possibly make sense that she could go after people who used the term before her client did, and the lawyer's response was:"they all have to stop now."Except... no. That's not quite how trademark works. But, once again, in a society where people think they get to claim ownership of whatever they want, we end up in silly situations like this. Hopefully the threatened bloggers are able to stand up to the bullying frugalista. Who knew that living the frugalista lifestyle included trademark infringement suits?
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Filed Under: blogging, frugalista, trademark
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Natalie P. McNeal is no longer a "Frugalista"!
And if she keeps this crap up, she graduates to "AssHatista".
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If words are not used then they will not be in common circulation and will not be understood, if they are not understood then they are pointless.
In short she is the kind of person who makes me want to scream "Get lost you stupid woman!" from the rooftops.
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She's changing her domain to something else on Oct 1...
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Re:
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frugalista
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Dear Frugalista:
"Hello! My name is Natalie “Frugalista” McNeal, and I’m the editor of a special new project of the Nightly Business Report called “Riding Out The Storm.” Our team wants you to submit a video to uVu of any questions, feelings or views that you have about this tricky economy. We would love to know how this economy is impacting your life. Have you found a job? Are you looking for work? Is your unemployment running out? Are you working in a new career because of the job market? Were you able to get a great deal on a home because of the economy? Also, if you have any questions about what to do with your finances, please ask us in a video and we will have a top financial advisor answer you in a video for FREE! [image] In my other life, I blog about frugal and fabulous living at The Frugalista Files. See, I’m trying to make this economy work for me, too! Please submit your videos early and often! I don’t bite (hard)! xo, Frugalista"
Well, Ms. Frugalista, maybe you can give me some advice. You see, I decided to start a blog about how to live a frugal lifestyle. In doing so, I utilized a word that is in the Oxford dictionary to describe myself. In the process, some horrible cunt came along and had the balls, which is ironic, to TRADEMARK A WORD THAT IS NOW IN THE FUCKING ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND COMMON USE. I am now in the market for several high powered weapons and explosives, but am unsure of the most frugal way to go about attaining them. Any suggestions? (FYI, please oh pretty please don't unmask The Helmet, I was just KIDDING, for christ's sake!)
Idiot.
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Is that this woman's claim to fame?
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"OK, I'm going to trademark "douchebagalista". That is a person who uses their douchebagginess to ruin the lives of other people for no apparent reason."
I would exchange the word ruin with meddle as I do not believe that this is going to ruin any ones life. I do hope though that there is someone who will stand up to this individual (you may use which ever expletive you like) and has her trademark taken away.
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There's a couple things wrong here. First, what market is supposed to be protected by the use of the trademark "frugalista"? The trademark "Apple" protects the market of various consumer electronic devices. What is "frugalista" protecting?
Secondly, identifying myself as "frugalista" could never violate a trademark. A person is rarely a product in a market. For example, I can freely identify myself as a Apple lover or Apple-head to show my love of Apple's products. That could not be a trademark violation because no one could ever confuse me with an iPod or an operating system. Plus the simple fact that I'm not a product in commerce.
Lastly, trademarks cannot be merely descriptive. If "frugalista" means a person who practices a frugal lifestyle, there is simply no way someone could trademark the term to keep people from using it to describe a frugal lifestyle.
Think of it this way, Apple was able to use the term "apple" as a trademark, because it is not in the apple business. However, if I had an orchard I could not trademark the word "apple" and keep others from referring to apples as apples.
I'm assuming her lawyer knows nothing about trademark law.
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Three-peat and 12th Man
Also, Texas A&M trademarked "the 12th man" (refers to the crowd, 11 people on the field + the crowd = ...) and sued the Seattle Seahawks regarding it.
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Trademark on Streissand Effect
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Posts of the Day to...
Expect to receive my medical bills for having to bite my tongue to keep from laughing out loud, jerks.
It's been a while having a good laugh like this.
Now, on topic...
... oh, forget it. Other replies pretty much take care of this for me.
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Re:
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This guy was in his early 20s.
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Re:
1) Say "So sue me", wait for papers to be served.
2) Point out that "The Frugalista" and "The Frugalista Files" is tradmarkable, but "frugalista" is not.
3) Hope that the judge is not a moron in a hurry and can tell one blog from another.
4) Countersue for damages.
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Dumb Frugalista bitch.
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redefine
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Have you considered changing your usage to "frugalisto" which would certainly apply to the masculine form of "frugalista."
Possibly, you could use a "latinized" version...something like "homo frugalisticus" which sounds a bit gay perhaps but you have to compromise to aviod this lawsuit.
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Re:
If "frugalista" is used as an adjective, I agree with you as to its use as a descriptive word. If it is used as a title, I disagree. "I am the Frugalista!" does not make "frugalista" descriptive. The trouble, here, is that "frugalista" is clearly _generic_. Generic words cannot be trade- or service-marks.
Incidentally, descriptive words _can_ be trademarks, once they acquire secondary meaning. Think of it this way: Blue Jean Babies might be a line of stuffed dolls made from denim. "Blue Jean Babies" is merely descriptive of the dolls - they are blue denim depictions of babies. But if the manufacturer is able to infuse that with secondary meaning, so people associate "Blue Jean Babies" with a particular source or origin, then they can register the mark.
Misdescriptive words often cannot, and deceptively misdescriptive words never can be registered. There is a (mostly funny) argument that "frugalista" is deceptively misdescriptive of anyone who would pay what it costs (generally around $3500+) to obtain a trademark registration on a generic word.
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Re:
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Illegal alien Frugalistas
Lazy Frugalistas
Damned foreign Frugalistas
Ex-con Frugalistas
Meagan's Law Frugalistas
Long-haired hippie pot smoking Frugalistas
Wife-swapping, pill-popping Frugalistas
Commie-loving Frugalistas
Fugitive Frugalistas
Hey this is fun.
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Re:
This WHOLE THING has been nuts. I did the blog for me and my friends so we could share tips about shoe sales, consignment stores, and the like. The word "frugalista" struck me funny -- it's one of them "new-fangled" words. Plus, I am about the lest "ista" a person can get.
My blog had gotten MAYBE 40 views before I got my cease and desist letter. Now, I am around 4000.
I posted the letter, http://jacksonfrugalista.wordpress.com/cease-and-desist-letter-to-jacksonfrugalista/, my arguments against the trademarks (there are 2), http://jacksonfrugalista.wordpress.com/argument-against-trademark-of-frugalista/, and my email response to the attorney and Ms. McNeal, http://jacksonfrugalista.wordpress.com/response-to-cease-and-desist-letter/, on my blog. Check them out -- it's every bit as ridiculous as it seems.
As far as fighting it -- I have had many people encourage me to fight, going so far as to offering me donations to help fund appeals. I feel REALLY WEIRD about accpeting money from people, even for a justified fight. I didn't set my blog up to generate income and I frankly worry about somehow getting in trouble for accepting any donations.
That said, $600 is a chunk of change I can't spare. I post under the name "Frugal Gal" -- and I'm frugal for a reason.
I have added a post asking people to give me their input on what my next steps should be -- change the name and leave it all alone, change the name and keep fighting, don't change the name and see what happens, or don't change the name and accept money to fund a fight. I would appreciate any thoughtful comments anyone might have to add -- http://jacksonfrugalista.wordpress.com/.
I am not wed to the word "frugalista," but I AM wed to my rights of expression. Not to be melodramatic, but if it's OK for someone to own that word, what other words will be taken away from me/us?
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Frugilista on Failblog?
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to go off in their op-ed pages on this. Also I think that her (the woman who had the cease-and desist letter sent) employer should be questioned over this. She does blog for a newspaper after all. Maybe this is just more newspaper against blog bashing then anything else......
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Re: douchebagalista
:)
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Chilling Effects?
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Re: Re:
Do it. The reason this shit happens is that often enough the C&D is enough. If people are willing to donate (and I'd be one of those) then that's right, justified, and frugal.
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Re: Re:
I'd say take whatever legal help - and financial help - that you're offered. Issues like this - that seem kind of dumb at first - are actually very important, for the exact reasons that you suggest.
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A LEGAL VIEWPOINT==THIS IS A LEGALLY REGISTERED TM
In this case, Frugalista applies distinctively to Ms. McNeal's blog, The Frugalista Files. Moreover, she is the person who she writes about in her blog who is living a frugal lifestyle.
What is wrong with big business today, Target, and copy cat bloggers taking the trademark of another and misappropriating it and then whining about it on a blog to pressure a small business owner like Natalie McNeal who is merely exercising her legal rights as they have been granted by the US Trademark office? Have you looked any of this up in the PTO RECORDS? Your reporting is biased. Frugalista is # 3532912 in the US Trademark Database. Did you check your facts prior to publishing this rot? This reads like a personal attack on someone who had an innovative idea and sought to legally protect it.
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Re: A LEGAL VIEWPOINT==THIS IS A LEGALLY REGISTERED TM
"...distinctive to her since 2008." Unfortunately for your thesis, the New York Times article on the 2008 word of the year points out that the word was coined in 2005 and in public use since then. Incidentally, that NYT article is now the #1 Google result for "frugalista". So much for using Google rankings as evidence for the validity of a trademark. You do a great job using the PTO issuance of the trademark as evidence for supporting ... wait for it... the validity of the PTO issuance of the trademark. Yay for circular logic!
On the September 10 blog entry in The Frugalista Files, "The Frugalista" addresses advice from a stylist to other "Frugalistas". Apparently, by securing the trademark on Frugalista, she now gets to call herself and others frugalistas, but no one else can identify themselves as part of that group. Does that make *any* sense?
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A LEGAL VIEWPOINT==THIS IS A LEGALLY REGISTERED TM by Valkor
What the NY Times writes about a word does not change the fact of trademark registration for a distinctive blog. The PTO granted the TM registration to McNeal, that is not circular logic.
I am amazed by the cyber bullying going on here.
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Re: A LEGAL VIEWPOINT==THIS IS A LEGALLY REGISTERED TM by Valkor
The fact that you are allowed to register it doesn't make you right. In the past there are numerous examples in which a registered mark is revoked because it was confusing to ANOTHER trademark. According to your logic, those who got revoked should have argued that the fact PTO allowed them to register before means that it's not confusing to another trademark and thus PTO cannot revoke what itself has allowed in the past. Does this actually sound right? As Volkor has point out, this IS indeed circular logic.
And your argument about the "notice period" is laughable. Who in their right mind checks PTO's site everyday to try to find out what has been trademarked recently. Unless you are a trademark troll hired by some troll company to check it everyday so you can sue for big money. Even large business only check the trademarks after they though of a new product line to check if it conflicts with another.
BTW, McNeal, whom I have absolute no respect for, is not innovative. You have conveniently left out the fact that SHE DID NOT INVENT THE WORD. She just took someone's idea and word and trademarked it for herself. That's a thief, a robber, not a innovator.
Hey McNeal, if you happens to read this blog, let it be known that you are neither innovator, or a frugalista. You are just a lowly COMMON THIEF. You are no different then all those pirated goods from China. The only difference is that your style is actually low enough to try to BULLY OTHERS by legal means.
Just watch, you are going to suffer from this unbelievably idiotic move.
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"I am so thrilled to hear about your fall line up. I whish I could be there to chant “Yeah Frugalista!” I spotted a Target ad that said “Frugalista” and thought about your blog. Hey Frugalista FUN is catching on."
Posted by: Nicki Mayo | September 17, 2009 at 04:32 PM
The irony! Other people's use of the term may actually HELP her not HARM her. I had to LOL...oh the fun is "catching on" all right. It involves cease and desist letters. If you end up broke from defending a frivilous law suit, I bet it makes it easier to be a "frugalista"! LOL...
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good grief
http://www.csprgroup.com/make-way-for-the-frugalista/
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Re: Call me Al
In a similar case a US shoe manufacturer trademarked the word "Ugg" as in ugg boots, then turned around and sued a bunch of Aussie shoemakers who had been using the word in a generic sense for some thirty years before the US co. grabbed it, for the inside-out sheepskin boots they had been making all that time.
Microsoft sued Lindows for using a word that resembled "Windows", the name of their operating system, then backed down and paid Lindows a big bunch of money when they realized the court might invalidate their "Windows" TM.
If I recall correctly, you cannot legally make a trademark of a commonly used word. But people do it anyway and get by with it. So I guess "Frugalista" is just another case of the same.
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Update
I caved and changed the name — my “buy cool stuff cheap” blog is now http://frugalmississippi.blogspot.com. I ma looking forward to posting info about garage sales in Pelahatchie, MS, without the threat of a lawsuit.
THAT SAID — I am not willing to let the issue die. So I created a second new blog, “Really Dumb Trademarks.” Its address is http://reallydumbtrademark.blogspot.com.
I CAN’T believe I am the only person this has happened to — other people have had their online freedom of speech cut off because of some ridiculous trademark filing. I’d like us all to have a place to go and vent.
I also want to post resources for site visitors who wish to fight the fight.
Ideally, this new blog will catch the attention of some organization that works to protect individuals’ rights online. If I can get someone like that interested, I’d like to see all the people who offered ME money to help in a fight against Trademark Girl in Miami direct those funds to a larger effort to make trademarks work fairly for everyone.
Those of you who have spoken out on the plain craziness of this trademark, I hope you’ll stay interested in the topic. Maybe we can continue to make some noise, get some things changed, and then I CAN CHANGE MY NAME BACK. And laugh maniacally towards the general direction of Miami.
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Here's what we can do
2. Click on every other link than her's.
3. All the other sites will get more hits and her ranking will go down on Google.
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Redefining
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