Apple: an 'App Store' Is Not a Store For Apps 279
recoiledsnake writes "What would be your first guess about what an app store sells? Don't be fooled, Apple warns, the phrase 'app store' is not generic and can only be used to describe Cupertino's... um, app store? 'Apple denies that, based on their common meaning, the words "app store" together denote a store for apps,' Apple said in a Thursday filing with a California district court. All this notwithstanding that Jobs himself used the phrase generically while referring to Android app stores. We've previously discussed this ongoing legal battle."
Old news...? (Score:2)
Re:Old news...? (Score:4, Informative)
So, how is this at all different from the way Apple has been making the same claim for the past several weeks?
Slashdot needs to serve ads and Apple hasn't done anything else to bitch about.
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Thanks, but I don't need you "defending" me by characterizing "hippie punching" as "mocking the unworkable solutions of a bunch of utopians." You are in fact hippie punching, by claiming hippies are all utopians and their solutions are all unworkable. Was Rahm Emmanuel mocking an unworkable solution when he said all leftists were "Fucking Retards?" No, he was hippie punching. We don't need any smug, smirking, "Serious" people telling us our ideas are unworkable, when the most ridiculous and proven ineffecti
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Racism implies that a person is being prejudged by an inherent physical trait which they have no control over. Being a drugged out loser is a completely rational decision that each hippie makes, and it is perfectly fair to judge them for it.
Do I sound this whacked out when I get angry? (Score:5, Interesting)
Ahahahaha, oh my. Seriously? You fail reading comprehension, my lefty comrade. You fail hard. And you must not be much of a leftist AT ALL, or you would know what the term means. "Hippie punching" refers not to any sort of physical violence, it refers to the fact that even on the left, politicians try to find someone to the left of them to attack.
When Rahm Emmanuel called leftists "Fucking retards," THAT was hippie punching. In fact, there was a huge shitstorm over it where just about everyone on the left was using the term "hippie punching" and accusing the White House of it. Sorry we forgot to call and tell you about all the fun.
When I was volunteering with Food Not Bombs in San Francisco and the cops threw me to the ground, stood on my shoulder blades, zip-tied my hands and pulled up HARD on my arms, that was not hippie punching. That was just plain old police violence.
See the difference? Generally, only those on the left get accused of hippie punching, because on the right, it is just par for the course. Man bites dog and all that.
Shit.
You do know I am not actually advocating biting a dog here, right?
Confused? (Score:2)
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You can still punch a hippie but you need a new justification. I'll give you the all purpose justification: we don't punch back. Use that one at your own risk though. Some of us do.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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You really have no idea how much that baptist minister emphasized going to hell in his sermons. Maybe he rode a skateboard and was a real cooool cat. Maybe he played guitar and sang about love and forgiveness and turning the other cheek and not casting the first stone and all that shit that Jesus supoosedly actually said, as opposed to hell, which one crazy dude on drugs wrote about much later.
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We can tell racist jokes. It is physically possible. It is also physically possible to eat dog shit, punch a pregnant lady in the stomach, and stab a baby. Those things are only slightly less repugnant than telling racist jokes. However, we can still tell jokes about assholes like you. Did you hear the one about the racist that got shot in the face? Yeah, that's the punchline, you are supposed to laugh now.
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Sigh. That was part of the joke...
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We can tell racist jokes. It is physically possible. It is also physically possible to eat dog shit, punch a pregnant lady in the stomach, and stab a baby.
What's more racist? Telling a joke about a specific group of people (doesn't have to be derogatory to be classed as racist nowadays) or being told you cant tell that joke because of the colour of your skin?
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Assuming that everyone that tells racist jokes is a racist is fucking stupid. Comedy based on stereotypes are just funny; and series like Goodness Gracious Me [wikipedia.org] elevate it to excellency. The fact that we are so hung up on races just shows our immaturity.
Apple == EVIL (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Apple == EVIL (Score:5, Insightful)
And no matter how you spin it, turn it upside down and examine it, try to put the most positive face on it, it is also hostile toward consumers.
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Re:Apple == EVIL (Score:4, Insightful)
Hmmm.
Xerox can copyright a shortening of the term Xerography ("dry printing").
Apple has been using the term and suffix .app since it bought NeXT.
Microsoft copyrighted a network centric API called .Net and uses that suffix.
Microsoft copyright a window manager called Windows. (recall that the original Windows was not really an OS but just a GUI window manager for DOS.)
It seems to me that apple winds on many grounds.
the term application has many meanings so it's use in the narrow term for an application on a computer is similar to the narrow usage of the generic words Apple or Amazon as company names in their fields not as fruit or rivers. Apple would probably get in trouble if they opened a store in the amazon basin and called it the Apple Amazon store.
So if Windows can bar Lindows and Amazon could bar apple from calling one of it's regional stores Amazon since they are in the same field why can't Apple bar amazon from re-using it's coined app term.
Likewise apple wins because App is a word invented like Xerox.
Just because someone used a slang term "killer app" does not mean the slang can't be copyrighted.
Go ask Yahoo if Yahoo is copyrighted.
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Absolutely NONE of those things are "copyrighted". Try again.
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app has been used to describe applications long before Apple decided to also.
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Likewise apple wins because App is a word invented like Xerox.
I'm curious what you mean by that, because in the end, all words were "invented".
"Coined" in TM law (Score:3)
Re:Apple == EVIL (Score:4, Informative)
Apple has been using the term and suffix .app since it bought NeXT
My 1985 Atari ST with GEM used .app as extension for applications (and .prg for programs. Apparently there was a difference).
"start GEM and run INSTALL.APP"
http://www.retroarchive.org/cpm/archive/unofficial/gemworld.html [retroarchive.org]
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Apple has been using the term and suffix .app since it bought NeXT
My 1985 Atari ST with GEM used .app as extension for applications (and .prg for programs. Apparently there was a difference).
"start GEM and run INSTALL.APP"
http://www.retroarchive.org/cpm/archive/unofficial/gemworld.html [retroarchive.org]
Which is a good point. THey could lose too. The point I was trying to get across is that copyrighting or trademarking something seemingly already out there or easily derived is not a reason to say they don't have a case. But if the term was already in use for the specific meaning and in the same manner it will be hard sleding.
So while you point out that .app was not original, the rest of the argument I made still is standing for now. "app" used in the context of a store name, may still be accepted. It
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First, Microsoft doesn't have a trademark (which is what you are talking about - not copyrithgs) on .Net. Windows was a graphical interface for DOS and was originally going to be called interface manager. No matter what they weren't sell windows based on the commonly held definition of a window at the time.
Xerox may be based on Xerography but as long as the name of their company wasn't Xerography they are fine. And their trademark is still valid by the way. You don't buy a Canon Xerox machine. You buy
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Yahoo is a trademark, Xerox lost it's trademark on xeroxing since they weren't actively protecting it until it was too widely used.
Same goes for the term "googling it", not copyrighted, nor trademarked (and doesn't fall under the trademark google) since it became a generic term before google tried to protect it.
And same goes for all you examples I guess - but you seem to have trademark and copyright confused.
Let's sing: "One more game, one more app" (Score:2)
Xerox can [trademark] a shortening of the term Xerography ("dry printing").
But where did the second X come from? That's a big part of what makes it a coined term.
Apple has been using the term and suffix .app since it bought NeXT.
As have distributors of warez, in the "appz" section. Compare the refrain of "The Warez Song" by Test of Time, released on MP3.com in either 1999 or 2000: "One more game, one
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So if Windows can bar Lindows and Amazon could bar apple from calling one of it's regional stores Amazon since they are in the same field why can't Apple bar amazon from re-using it's coined app term.
Likewise apple wins because App is a word invented like Xerox.
Actually, MS did not bar Lindows, they ended up settling because they almost lost that one. And for the record, "Windows" does not describe what it is, "An operating system", however "App Store" is precisely that, "A store that sells Apps".
Further, Apple did not invent "App", as even the mark "AppStore" was registered back in 1998 by another company.
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Google started using the word App in 2006 for Google Apps (well before the Apple trademark application in 2008).
App was a buzzword in 2002 for Microsoft 95/98 application development.
Numerous references exist for making an "app" in various perl and php forums around 2000.
A killer app for computer chat [economist.com] published in the Economist in 1999.
Article titled "The Killer App" [googleusercontent.com] published in the Harvard Business Review in 1998
App Launcher [woodmann.com] software patcher circa 1998.
"DOS App" [googleusercontent.com] used on uunet in 1994...
And that is just fr
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Apple with its fully closed garden is some kind of white knight...
Black knight at the moment. White knight is unavailable until six months after black knight release due to technical difficulties with the light sensors.
Re:Apple == EVIL (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple tries to control what you can do with the device you bought, insist on getting money every time you want to do something with that device. The abuse the legal system, and twist contracts even if they have to 'shop for judges'
So, yeah, evil.
Could the be more evil? sure.
" activist judges"
I see the republican meme has gotten fully into your brain.
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insist on getting money every time you want to do something with that device.
Say again? Are you on crack or some other drug? Methinks you are taking something and mis-applying it something fierce here.
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This week at work someone had put their Android device on our network via Wifi. It was harvestingWindows logins and trying to login with them. Such things don't happen with a policed application store.
Great story there... you do know there are packet sniffers and other such programs for the iPhone? [google.ca] They are just a jailbreak away...
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Um, Nokia wanted access to NON-mobile patents held by Apple. I.e. patents that were totally unrelated to the technologies involved in the mobile space. Which Apple obviously refused to give them. Why should different rules apply to Apple and Samsung for instance?
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apple made a string of good ones
I fail to see superiority of a first-generation iPhone over first-generation Windows 7 Mobile phone (let's compare apples to apples here... pun intended). Neither had copy-paste. Regardless, saying that term "app store" is proprietary is ridiculous. Some other companies that are not evil have allowed their trademarked company name to become a verb in the dictionary, you know...
I'm waiting for Sony Ericsson to claim ownership of the term "smartphone"...
I wonder what would happen (Score:5, Interesting)
if they simply ignored Apple? If someone came around to shut them down, they'd say "Really? You think our app store is confusingly called an App Store? Go away and grow some common sense."
Re:I wonder what would happen (Score:5, Informative)
Actually the populace can reduce the effectiveness of a trademark by genericizing it [wikipedia.org]. If everyone from your grandmother to your 5 year old nephew began using "app" and "app store" as everyday jargon, the trademark would be genericized and has reduced legal protection.
So if you want to annoy Jobs and co, all you have to do is start referring to any software as an "app" and any outlet that sells software as an "app store" regardless of if it is or is not owned or run by Apple.
Some examples of companies that suffered from this effect are the term "googling" instead of "searching" and use of "kleenex" instead of "tissue".
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Hoover up that mess will you!
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Actually - Puffs sells Facial Tissues. Nowhere on their product does it say "Kleenex" and if they did they would be sued. Same goes with Hoover, Band Aids, etc. You will never see a trademark being used legally by another brand.
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See: Aspirin
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Bayer lost their Aspirin trademark in 4 countries as part of World War I reparations. I would hardly count that as a glowing example. It's still trademarked in many countries. Curiously enough they also had and lost a trademark on heroin.
Sounds a bit odd. (Score:2)
Black is white, down is up, right is left, and an App Store is not an App Store.
Riiiight.
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Down is up, right is left, B, A, B, A, Start.
Wait, what?
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Ask your girlfriend, next time you go down on her... :-)
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Why was he standing in the way of a bunch of zebras?
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Cos God no longer existed.
Well, it's obvious (Score:5, Funny)
"App store" is short for "Apple store"! Of *course* nobody else can use it! Not even if they're selling actual fruit!
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Yes, we wouldn't want anyone to upset the app cart.
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So they maintain that App is short for "Apple"? (Score:5, Insightful)
If the "App" is short for "Apple" (as they're presumably arguing), then that means that they're calling their online applications store the "Apple Store," which seems to conflict with their physical hardware-oriented stores of the same name. Methinks that would indicated that "Apple" was not what they meant there.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm going to listen to the Beatles on the Apple record label. Of course, in that case [wikipedia.org], Apple argued that "Apple" was a generic term. I guess things have changed.
Re:So they maintain that App is short for "Apple"? (Score:4, Informative)
This strangely echoes the fight between MCA and Nintendo over the name "Donkey Kong".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_City_Studios,_Inc._v._Nintendo_Co.,_Ltd [wikipedia.org].
MCA claimed that Donkey Kong infringed on their "King Kong" trademark, Nintendo won the battle when they showed that MCA had previously argued (and won) that King Kong and its characters were already in the public domain.
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Maybe it stands for Applecation Store.
boo hoo (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe Apple needs a Kleenex(tm) to cry into and a Band-Aid(tm) to make it all better...
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or do like Eddie Murphy says... have a Coke and a smile and shut the fuck up.
It was actually Richard Prior that said that, Eddie Murphy was just quoting him. Never mind that it would work better if it was Microsoft and not apple since the whole quote is "Tell Bill to have a coke and a smile, and shut the fuck up."
Groklaw now has someone new to follow (Score:2)
Paypal isn't a bank, and Ebay isn't an auction (Score:2)
Nutters (Score:2)
Really? (Score:2)
They're right, in a way... (Score:2)
Insanely Obvious (Score:2)
I know it seem insanely obvious now, but the term didn't really gain traction until Apple came out with the iPhone around 2007. Don't believe me, then believe Google Trends [google.com].
I'm pretty sure others (like MS) were using terms like marketplace, download center, central, etc. before they decided to jump on the App Store band wagon
Re:Insanely Obvious (Score:4, Insightful)
Whether or not "app store" was widely used is irrelevant. The fact is that "app" was widely used years and years before this to refer to programs/software/applications. Where does one sell "apps?" An app store. If that isn't obvious, I don't know what is.
In other news... (Score:2)
In other news coming to hand, "Free Software" doesn't mean the software is free of cost.
Apps = Appetizers (Score:2)
Duh.
http://video.adultswim.com/frisky-dingo/guys-nibblies.html [adultswim.com]
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Post hoc justification for the win. I mean, instead of shooting for a reasonable, defensible trademark, now they are forced into defending this highly provocative trademark. Poor them. Especially considering all the free advertising this is getting them in the press.
Anyway as the owner of Program Files (tm), I take exception to something called the "App Store", since in fact my directory can also be used to store apps. And I have a far larger market share than apple, rofl.
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Free advertising is only helpful if you are not the most valuable brand name in america (according to a study a few weeks back).
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While I do think they are correct that maintaining "App Store" as a brand is valuable to them as part of their marketing scheme, and thus en
Re:Trademark law (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Trademark law (Score:5, Interesting)
Although, Jobs himself used the term generically. From the legal filing (excerpted from The Register [theregister.co.uk]):
While IANAL, I take the phrase "easiest-to-use, largest app store" to imply that there are others - presumably, smaller, harder to use - but, hey, that's just me, parsing English... Further quoting The Register article and filing - and this seems funny to me (emboldening mine):
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You don't have to "defend your patent or lose it". That's trademarks. Really, the whole "IP" concept is stupid. There are more differences between copyright, trade marks, patents and trade secrets than there are areas of commonality.
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Ah. You're absolutely right, I'm not sure what I was thinking; it is trademarks which you have to defend or lose.
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It's an invalid trademark. It's entirely generic and deserves no protection whatsoever.
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The same should then hold for e.g. Windows.
Except Microsoft were so defensive over the name that they sued Lindows [wikipedia.org].
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Who cares about Windows? That's not what's under discussion here.
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That would make sense if Microsoft was actually selling windows like Anderson and not an operating system. Same would be true if Apple was a fruit vendor or Yahoo selling rednecks.
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Microsoft did, effectively, lose that suit (it paid money to Lindows in a settlement, though the latter agreed to transfer their trademark to MS).
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I don't know in what world you're living, but I have been using the term "app" for applications/programs/software years before the iPhone was released.
Just because you might never have heard the term except in the context of Apple doesn't mean it wasn't used elsewhere.
And by the way, when taking about linux I hardly ever use the word 'software'. The simple world where everything fits nicely into a drawer doesn't exist.
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Also, if you ask some people, it has always been "E
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The ExBin Store!
You heard it here first folks, so it's mine... all mine !!
Re:Imagination? (Score:5, Informative)
Just in case you're not a troll and really are this miss informed about those words your throwing about as Mutually Exclusive when they really are Generic Terms. Here [google.com] is a News Paper Scan from the now about-to-be-abandoned scan archive. See the Date Feb 27, 1997 along with office 97 all highlighted for you.
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You're ether poorly trying to communicate sarcasm or your a deliberate troll.
Just in case you're not a troll and really are this miss informed about those words your throwing about as Mutually Exclusive when they really are Generic Terms. Here [google.com] is a News Paper Scan from the now about-to-be-abandoned scan archive. See the Date Feb 27, 1997 along with office 97 all highlighted for you.
You might not be aware but besides Apps on OS X being stored in the /Applications directory, every app on OS X has had the .app extension whereas programs on dos/windows had the extensions of either .exe or .com. Given that Apple's desktop OS was using the .app extension to denote user facing Application packages/launchers, I would say that Apple has the strongest claim to "App" and "App store".
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.app in 1985: http://apple.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2173906&cid=36196908 [slashdot.org]
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Then Apple starts using Apps, coins the App Store
Yeah, just like they "coined" the term "podcast" and only then did podcasting get popular....</sarcasm>
As if I hadn't been making "Web Apps" for the Century previous to their filing... before that, BBS Apps, such as my ASCII Tetris & pong apps, and the "ANSI-APP" series of DOS-to-Win95 era text-GUI programs that ran locally or remotely via my text-only "compositing" window manager (using ANSI + ASCII w/ CP437). Note esp: "ANSI-APP" because 8 (dot) 3 file names were the norm at the time. (We a
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In my company our software development group is referred to as App Dev and has been since long before the app store.
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Why? It's not a store where they sell APPL shares. /duck
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As long as it's not Plaid.
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Apple's goal with the Mac was to create a cheap machine, though they somewhat failed at that. But at the time, IBM PCs were expensive beasts, and until the Phoenix reverse-engineered BIOS, so were the clones. "Innovation"? PCs were formulaic, and when Gates had stopped scofffing at GUIs and made Windows, it was a derivative of the Mac UI (licensed, though). Macs had proper(ish) networking while Microsoft ignored that (or rather left it to third parties like Novell).
Not sure where you picked up your worship
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