Facebook Says That If You Use The Site You Agree To Its Bogus Claim To Hold A Trademark On 'Book'
from the uh,-nice-try dept
We've discussed in the past Facebook's aggressive claims of trademarks on pretty much any use of "face" as a prefix or "book" as suffix. The company did eventually get a registered trademark on some uses of "Face", but the "book" part has proven more difficult. That said, you really don't have to register a trademark, but can assert common law trademarks based on use alone, which can be pretty effective. Still, the folks at Ars Technica noticed that Facebook has now slipped a little nugget into its user agreement, saying that if you use the site you effectively agree to the company's claims on a variety of trademarks. It had already included a bunch before, but has now added "book" to the list.Ars suggests that this could strengthen Facebook's claims against sites, but I'm not convinced. While clickthrough license agreements that no one reads may have some force under law, I would think that any company using the phrases legitimately could make a good case that such a clickthrough in no way diminishes their rights to make reasonable use of "face" or "book." Really, though, Facebook should shackle its trademark lawyers a bit and tell them to chill out in all but the most egregious cases. Being a trademark bully is no way to build a company.
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Filed Under: book, face, trademark, user agreement
Companies: facebook
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FACEPLANT
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Re: FACEPLANT
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And more...
And you can't protest this in any way, shape, or form as you've already read it and agree to these terms. So don't even bother trying to fight. That's it. You're done. It's over. Period. End of story. So don't even say another word as you don't get to defend yourself.
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Re: And more...
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So are all users of the software that signed up previous to this, grandfathered in or out? Those additions were not there at the time of their sign up or supposed reading of the terms of use.
As Mr. Smarta** has pointed out, just because you have some sort of terms of agreement doesn't make it enforceable.
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Re: Let them claim copyright over that.
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Our 4,000,000 FB fans all agree this is totally like right and legal and that way better than a law a couple hundred people voted for.
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Re: Re: Let them claim copyright over that.
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Baseless trademark threats are usually ineffective
However, I don't believe that the F-entity is attempting to go that far yet ! Also, such a thing seldom works if challenged. For example Chilling Effects has documented a Censorship attempt couched as a Trademark notice, which turns out to be an attempt by a school to stop parents from criticizing it. This failed, as you can see the the GIIS parents blog has not censored itself (though it seems to have ceased activity). The school is now shopping for jurisdictions where the censorship attempt will work, and since it may work in India, they are (under their new names Global Schools Foundation and GIIS K-12 Education Private Ltd) suing Google as well as an Indian government agency (CERT-IN) in Delhi for hosting the blog and for not ordering it to be blocked, respectively. The outcome of that exercise will be interesting to watch, as the current Indian regime is advocating a "heavy touch" style of regulation of internet social media. Censorship by Courts in India follows the "block first, hear later" approach according to Rajeev Dhavan, a Supreme Court attorney of note. If there is a non-zero chance that a Singapore website can be blocked by a Court in India, that is interesting food for thought about the nature of cyberspace itself and the meaning of national boundaries.
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Interesting
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Annonymous is getting serious. Time to hack facebook and drop a virus on this site.
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FaceBook
A site ceases to become user friendly when I have to check every day and apply a NEW set of rules to cover my ass and attempt to prevent unintended use of my information. Not worth the effort. See ya later FaceBook, you've lost me forever.
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Of course, it's understandable some people don't feel good when someone just changes the terms in their agreement without getting the former to actually agree with it, although it depends on how much "harm" it might cause, perhaps.
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Facebook trademarks "face" and "book
I suppose if there is any way to abuse something, someone will find a way to exploit it to everyone else's detriment.
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Re: Facebook trademarks "face" and "book
Ah well, better to let your enemies weaken each other...
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Re: Facebook trademarks "face" and "book
That happens only if using common, generic words in their common, generic meaning. Shell, tide and head and shoulders can't become trademarks for selling mollusks, the waves and one whose head is above the rest, but they're distinctively and commercially successful as petroleum, detergent and shampoo respectively.
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What I call unique, famous marks like Google, Facebook, etc. do have stronger protection because...well...they're unique and famous. They're the only exception wherein you can't use those EXACT terms even for something else because many people will likely associate them with their actual sources still.
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Of course, that doesn't stop some people (especially those who know little to nothing about trademarks) from believing otherwise.
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