Apple Orders Memory Game Developers To Stop Using 'Memory' In Names 409
An anonymous reader writes with this bit of trademark absurdity from geek.com: "Ravensburger is a German gaming company that specializes in jigsaw puzzles, but has also expanded into other areas such as children's books and games. The company owns the trademark to a board game called 'Memory' and has demanded Apple stop offering apps that have the word 'memory' in their title or as a keyword associated with an app. It may seem ludicrous such a common word can be trademarked, but apparently this is a valid claim as Apple is now serving notices to app developers. The choice an infringing app developer has is to either rename their app or remove it from the App Store."
And this is why I'll never live in a walled garden (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, your garden looks very nice at first glance. But I'll stay out here, thanks.
Sometimes a central authority is a good thing. But no-fucking-body is telling me what software I can or can't download, or banning me from downloading certain titles over some stupid shit like this. And this is just a mild example of what they *could* do if they wanted.
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Informative)
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, I understand that Apple didn't CHOOSE to do this (in this case anyway). It's the fact that they CAN that bothers me.
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Insightful)
Because Google hasn't done something similar? They've removed apps for trademark and copyright claims. But, hey, let's ignore that because we are Google fans.
Ok. And that stops me from installing those apps on Android... how, exactly?
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Insightful)
Nope.
You don't need to root an Android in order to side load apps.
You can also install alternate app stores.
It's that whole "open systems" thing.
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Informative)
Came here to say this too. Check "Allow Unknown Sources" in Settings, open .apk, install app. Perfectly allowable within the default Android setup, and yes, this is the setup that 95% of carriers use. (I've heard of some carriers taking away the Unknown Sources checkbox, but to my knowledge it's very uncommon.)
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Informative)
AT&T used to not allow that, but once people started trying to download Amazon's app store and got a ton of flak over it. AT&T quickly gave people the ability to do so.
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Came here to say this too. Check "Allow Unknown Sources" in Settings, open .apk, install app. Perfectly allowable within the default Android setup, and yes, this is the setup that 95% of carriers use. (I've heard of some carriers taking away the Unknown Sources checkbox, but to my knowledge it's very uncommon.)
AT&T used to not allow that, but once people started trying to download Amazon's app store and got a ton of flak over it. AT&T quickly gave people the ability to do so.
AT&T being the operative word.
The downside of an open system is that people can use it for evil. The upside of an open system is that if they do that, you simply dont buy from them.
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You're right that you don't need root, per se, but there are a lot of devices out there with sideloading disabled [androidcentral.com]
AT&T was really the only carrier that did this, and they re-enabled the checkbox (which gives the user the choice) quite a while ago. I don't have AT&T, but Amazon had warnings on their app pages about AT&T, and I haven't seen those in nearly a year.
At this point, no Android device requires root to install an app, regardless of source.
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Insightful)
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You appeal to the courts if you think their claim is spurious and if you win you resubmit your app. The procedure for fighting the claim is no different than if you weren't selling through someone's store and you were threatened with a lawsuit over a trademark claim against your product.
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Informative)
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Interesting)
They would have to go in front of a judge first.
That is due process. This is not.
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Insightful)
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In fact, there are several memory monitoring apps (ex: Memory Doctor) in the store that tell you information about RAM usage.
If Ravensburger went after them they'd get shot down faster than Sun's moronic C&Ds against all of the coffee shops with "java" in their domain.
If it's a game involving remembering things, yes, it's probably relevant, that's what trademarks are for. Otherwise, it's bulltshit.
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Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Interesting)
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But is Apple legally forced to restrict their customers from avoiding this restriction? No, the walled garden and "Apps only through OUR App store" is Apple's choice.
It is nice for the IP holders though. Millions of captive customers, penned in neatly by the shiny walls of the iOS lock-in. Apple rounds 'em up, brands 'em, and corrals 'em... every patent and trademark troll can pick 'em off and butcher 'em at leisure.
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a better analogy from asking a retailer to remove an infringing product from their store shelves.
Only, with an iPhone, that is the ONLY store I can go to. The doors are locked and I can't leave. With an Android, I can just walk out of that store and go to any other store and get the product there (or even go directly to the company that makes it and get it from them).
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Insightful)
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The funny thing is: what's a more common word than 'Memory?' How about 'Apple?'
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem is that Apple is also blocking sales while the two parties "work it out". Which they may never will - for example, the "offending" party may well be in a different jurisdiction where the trademark simply doesn't apply, but it applies to Apple in the states.
And the reason why it is a problem is because the app author can't just work it out directly with his users. If you're out of the App Store, you don't have any official, supported channel for people to install your app, period. So, yes, this is entirely about the walled garden.
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Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Insightful)
This exact same copyright claim ...
No copyright claim is being made. This is about a trademark.
Copyrights, trademarks, and patents are three different things . How can we ever expect politicians to fix our IP system, when even many geeks seem incapable of understanding even the absolute basics?
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If we want to compile a list of trademarks for common words we could start with:
A is for Apple
and work our way across the alphabet until we reach
M is for Monopoly
make our way up to
W is for Windows
I will leave it as an exercise for the reader to fill in the gaps. But I guess you get my meaning.
So while Apple(n
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Its fine to name your concrete company "McDonald's Concrete" but a food outlet called "MacDonanld's Home Made Burgers" is going to get your ass sued.
Trademarks also have to be approved and can be disputed easily as well.
IP system? (Score:3)
This is about a trademark.
Copyrights, trademarks, and patents are three different things . How can we ever expect politicians to fix our IP system, when even many geeks seem incapable of understanding even the absolute basics?
Fix the IP system? Politicians, advertising, many corporations, and now you are actively confusing the public by grouping the 3 terms into "intellectual property." Of which there is no such thing. Owning ideas is impossible, outside of fiction and courtrooms.
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Citizen Joe Average doesn't care. To him, all IP and related issues are grouped together and it doesn't matter if they're called copyright, trademarks, or patents. And thanks to persistent over-reach and abuse of them by megacorps, he almost certainly now believes they're all idiotic schemes, and he will honor them exactly as much as he needs to in order to stay away from jail and massive fines, and not one iota more. Megacorps have broken the idea of IP for the foreseeable future, and it looks like they're
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Informative)
1. Apple isn't banning the apps, they're telling the developers they have to rename them.
2. This isn't some arbitrary decision by Apple (unlike some other cases), this is because another company owns the trademark to "memory" in the context of games and is threatening to sue Apple if they don't comply with the order to have the apps' names changed.
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Insightful)
You do realize that plenty of "dictionary" words are trademarked, right? Apple, Windows, Subway, Amazon, Android, Fire. I could go on and on.
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Informative)
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure. But that has no relevance whatsoever, so I fail to see why you bothered to bring it up. Trademarks only apply within specific domains. Apple Inc. (formerly Apple Computer) and Apple Records were able to coexist for years since they were in different industries, yet they both had valid trademarks for the term Apple within their industries. It wasn't until Apple Inc. decided to get into music that things got really messy, since Apple Records had rights to the name in that space.
I could probably make a soda brand named Subway if I wanted to, but I couldn't make a restaurant with that name, since the name is already trademarked in that domain. Similarly, here, Memory is a trademarked name within the domain of games. While I could likely make a clothing brand named Memory, I can't make a game with that name, just as I can't make a tablet named Fire or an OS named Windows or Android. Just because I can make a product named Memory in a different domain does not mean that I have a right to make a product named Memory in the domain in which a trademark for that term applies.
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Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Insightful)
Which doesn't change the fact that this could happen so easily only because the other company only had to squeeze one throat to get a shutdown for *all* apps.
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Informative)
Well, the developer (ANY developer, mind you) can get sued for trademark infringement, so even your "open access" rules can get curtailed. Yes, if you make a "memory" game, expect to receive some cease-and-desist soon, regardless if it's walled, garden, open-source, whatever.
And Apple has so far let users keep their "removed" apps. I think even iCloud keeps a copy if you happen to not have a backed up copy.
Nope, it's nothing to do with a walled garden (which actually doesn't affect users so much as developers since removed apps still can be used by existing uesrs). This affects *ALL* developers.
Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Insightful)
It does have to do with a walled garden. A company can make a possibly frivilous complaint againt the garden owner who can then kick you out, and you have no recourse. If it was not a walled garden and you could sell your app independently, the claimant would have to go after you directly, and you would have the opportunity to legally defend yourself.
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Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, the developer (ANY developer, mind you) can get sued for trademark infringement, so even your "open access" rules can get curtailed.
This much is true...
Yes, if you make a "memory" game, expect to receive some cease-and-desist soon, regardless if it's walled, garden, open-source, whatever.
And Apple has so far let users keep their "removed" apps. I think even iCloud keeps a copy if you happen to not have a backed up copy.
Nope, it's nothing to do with a walled garden (which actually doesn't affect users so much as developers since removed apps still can be used by existing uesrs). This affects *ALL* developers.
... but you're missing an important point. The significance of the "walled garden" reference is this: if I am a developer of an application that uses the word "memory" in its title or as a keyword, but in a non-infringing way (and it's hard to imagine that every single possible use of the word "memory" infringes the trademark), then outside a walled garden, I have options: I may choose to capitulate to avoid a lawsuit, or I can choose to take my chances with the legal system and continue using the term (and, if I can get a good lawyer, I may well win). But Apple is not giving developers that choice - they can either remove the term "memory", or remove the app entirely.
I suspect that Ravensburger have taken action to protect their trademark, and are only likely concerned about apps that are similar to / might be confused with their product - and Apple are indeed probably liable if they are selling infringing products. But, rather than vet individual apps based on whether they infringe or not (which is time-consuming and error-prone), Apple have taken a decision to impose a blanket ban on the term - which, while I see the practical benefits from their point of view, is clearly detrimental to, say, people searching for an application to check what DIMMs might be compatible with some hardware they need to upgrade...
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Re:And this is why I'll never live in a walled gar (Score:5, Informative)
"It's harder for me to commit a crime so I don't like it" is the argument here. What's happening is there's a trademark claim, and people are being made to comply. It's no different than if you marketed an app called "Photoshop Pro" and Adobe shit all over your party, except people are so used to the concept of Tetris and, in this case, Memory that they find it bizarre and offensive that somebody actually owns these things. Somebody invented it, but all people see is that they can't remember when it was novel, so it must be free.
Trademark law is really strange. If you don't protect your trademark, you lose it. If Ravensberger makes an iOS app for the game of Memory, everyone searching for it will get all these clones, superior or inferior, by the same name. They'll play those and ignore Ravensberger's Memory. The market is then unmarketable. Thus Ravensberger has a strong desire to protect their trademark to Memory, since if they lose it and another market opens up and they want to capitalize on it then they can't because they can't defend their trademark because it has become generic. Thus they must petition to stop these things from using their trademark.
This is the same reason that Adobe doesn't like when someone claims they "used GIMP to photoshop" something: you did NOT photoshop that, Photoshop was not involved, stop saying these untrue things, you are creating brand confusion. It's fair game to say something is "like Photoshop," but not that it IS Photoshop or has been adjusted via Photoshop if Photoshop was not involved.
But all people want to see is, "Hey, how can you do that?" and they use weird arguments like "You' can't just trademark a generic word!" UPS has a trademark on the color Brown; both American Express and IBM have trademarks on the color Blue. Thing is UPS only has a trademark on using the color brown as a major marketing identifier for a shipping company: you cannot make a brown DHL, it has to be yellow or something. If FedEx reimaged to primarily earth tones, UPS would have a valid suit against them. If Chicago Suits took up the color brown as their major marketing factor--brown slacks, brown shoes, brown jackets, business and business casual wear--UPS has absolutely no standing to sue them because they're not a god damn shipping company and the trademark on Brown doesn't apply. Ravenberger has a trademark on a board game called Memory, and if you make a Memory toothbrush that doesn't reference the board game in any way then you're not infringing on their trade.
I Can See It Now (Score:5, Funny)
The Memory Game
That classic game of remembering is back in this awesome new iPhone app!
Apple: Please remove 'memory' from the title of your game or we will remove your game for you!
The Memorie Game
The Anglo-Normans are challenging your ability to remember in this awesome new iPhone app!
Apple: Don't be a smartass, you know what we mean. Please remove 'memorie' from the title of your game or we will remove your game for you!
The Memoria Game
Which cards had Marcus Aurelius beneath them and which cards had Marcus Annius Verus under them?! This classic challenging Latin game of remembering cards is in this awesome new iPhone app!
Apple: Goddamnit. Okay, no Latin root words of Memoria, okay? You'll be sued, we'll be sued, they own everything related to mem- and as preemptive warning, no 'mnemonic' shit either, okay? It's all owned by someone else!
The Apple Can Go Fuck Itself Game
Which company is making Apple its Intellectual Property bitch today? Try to find out in this classic game of "wait, what card was that again?"
Apple: Approved.
Re:I Can See It Now (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I Can See It Now (Score:5, Funny)
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The Memory Game
That classic game of remembering is back in this awesome new iPhone app!
Apple: Please remove 'memory' from the title of your game or we will remove your game for you!
I prefer The Mammary Game
I run the risk of Godwinning this thread (Score:5, Funny)
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Well, you failed, but nice try. I laughed aloud. Thanks.
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If you laughed aloud, he didn't fail.
He failed at godwinning, but not at winning.
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Or instead of calling it "Memory", call it "Concentration Camp".
I'm sure you already realize this, but that's hilariously fucking clever.
+5 Internets to you.
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that's hilariously fucking clever.
Some people disagreed [nesdev.com] when I showed them the story [pineight.com] for what is now called Concentration Room [pineight.com].
Hilarious, but seriously. (Score:2)
While I remember the old memory game(vaguely), I wonder if the suit being brought in Germany was somewhat 'court shopping'? After all, the IOS market is global, not just German, and depending on the laws, 'Memory' might be too vague in many countries to be a valid trademark on it's own.
I mean, what about a game called 'The Memories of Lars Fibbonachi'? Would that be in violation? 'In Memory of X?', etc...
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The unforgetery game.....
It's actually a fairly sensible reaction (Score:2, Interesting)
Foreign words are valid trademarks in all countries I've bothered to check, so that doesn't surprise me, at least for an international store like Apple's. Also, you *can* trademark a word to refer to this particular game. Nobody says you can't make a game that has you flip pictures and match them up as you remember where which one is. You just can't call it just 'Memory'. Come up with your own name, and you're golden. But of course then you can't mooch off their popularity by having people who look for 'Mem
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Not really. They aren't just banning ones named "memory" if the summery is correct they are bring down the ban hammer on any with "memory" in the title. Besides just because it is trademarked in anothe country does not make it trademarked her where it is a common part of your vocabulary. than agains so is apple window and other generic terms that have been trademarked
What's the generic term? (Score:2)
Re:What's the generic term? (Score:4, Insightful)
Why are you assuming that they are card matching games? Or even games at all. 'Memory' is part of a iPhone, after all.
Memory, as a foreign word, is a perfectly reasonable trademark for a German board game.
The problem is, as an _English_ word that actually describes part of a computer, it's really insane to run around claiming that computer programs cannot use it in their name.
It's sorta like 'Ford' is a entirely reasonable trademark for cars...but then Ford enters a new market that makes devices to help cars float across rivers...no, they can't bring that trademark along and sue people who sell a 'fording device'.
The trademark makes sense in the context of German board games, it does not make sense in the context of international computer programs.
Re:It's actually a fairly sensible reaction (Score:5, Interesting)
Due process does not apply here. Due process is a requirement on the State to respect the accuser's rights. Apple is not bound by due process.
New Sample Product Description (Score:3)
See, it's easy to avoid using a certain word.
Nominative use of competitor's mark (Score:3)
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If the app store has some kind of tagging system, I would expect the developer could add the word 'memory' as a tag too
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Of course, I didn't RTFS until after I posted. Nevermind.
razor (Score:2)
Didn't someone do the same thing with the word "razor" a few years ago?
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Didn't someone do the same thing with the word "razor" a few years ago?
Yes. It was Occam. My conclusion derived by the very razor of which you speak.
I'm tired of this ridiculous notion (Score:2)
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Companies do not own words because they used them first. It's one thing to outright steal the name of a product. It's another thing to claim you own every word in that product's name.
If you name your product with a word that describes some important aspect of your product, it will not get a trademark. Want to call your car company "Emu Cars"? You can get a trademark. If you want to call your car company "Wheels Cars"? You cannot go after people for using the world "Wheels" in their ads and descriptions.
Therefore, there is no way you can get a trademark on your graphical windowing system called "Windows".
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Try to create a program with the 'Word', 'Excel', or 'Windows' in it. I dare 'ya. ;-)
Sadly, like patents and copyright, trademarks have jumped the shark. Once they get granted, they're legally valid.
I would say that Ravensburger are penis heads, and whoever granted the word 'Memory' as a trademark is a complete moron. Now they're being memory nazi's. ;-)
I think I'll trademark Computer, Internet, Software, and Program .. and maybe a couple of adjectives like Big, Small, and Laughable. Oh, and for good me
Overreaching? (Score:5, Interesting)
Does this apply to all apps or just games? If it's just games then the claim may be indeed be legitimate (or not), but if it's all apps then it's certainly a case of overreaching by the trademark holder (or else an overreaction by Apple).
The most ridiculous element is the ban on the use of "memory" as a keyword. Trademark law was never intended to forbid others from naming competitors' products or from using trademarked words in their descriptive sense ("this game will enhance your memory and give you super-strength!").
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I call the(tm) game 'The'. I have trademarked 'The' and any use of this word will be disallowed without royalties.
A new trademark list has been approved for the(tm) future games below.
Se(tm)e(tm) fre(tm)e(tm) pre(tm)vi(tm)e(tm)ws of the((tm)tm) fu(tm)tu(tm)re(tm) ga(tm)me(tm)s 'A', 'But', 'An', 'Or', a(tm)nd o(tm)u(tm)r a(tm)dd-i(tm)n mo(tm)du(tm)le(tm)s 'E', 'I', 'O', 'U', a(tm)nd 'Y'. (a(tm)ll ri(tm)ghts re(tm)se(tm)rve(tm)d).
This is actually good (Score:5, Insightful)
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...good
for lawyers. How come we are not running out of lawyers with all that kind of claim/crap.
I always thought.. (Score:2)
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It is a German company (Score:5, Insightful)
Ravensburger is a German company, so any English word is considered to be sufficiently exotic to be trademarked.
Remember that when the USA pushes next time for harmonization and enforcement of trademark laws in other countries.
What fresh bullshit is this? (Score:4, Insightful)
Fucking cowardice.
Re:What fresh bullshit is this? (Score:5, Funny)
Come on, Apple. This claim is bullshit. Stand up for the developers who make your App Store and ecosystem a success.
Apple just doesn't have the cash to fight a small boardgame company from Germany.
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Come on, Apple. This claim is bullshit. Stand up for the developers who make your App Store and ecosystem a success.
Apple, a very common word, is trademarked.
As is Lion.
And Aperture.
And Motion.
And Safari.
Etc.
Microsoft plays this game, too --
with Office.
And Windows.
And Surface.
etc.
Is there a strong standing for Memory not to be allowed the same protections that AAPL enjoys on it's corporate branding? Not enforcing the request would be hypocritical at the very least.
When Did Apple Legal Get So Dumb? (Score:5, Insightful)
Which means, no one but the group that owns the rights to the IP of aforementioned board game is allowed, legally, to create a memory based board game and name it 'Memory.'
It does not mean that group owns all instances of the word memory.
It does not mean that group owns all instances of memory based board games.
This is simple, basic stuff.
WTF, Apple Legal? You're good enough at what you do to get a judgement against one of your competitors/suppliers for using goddamn rounded corners, but not good enough to point out something that's obvious to most 4th graders?
We are one of the many affected by this. (Score:4, Informative)
We are among the developers who have had to change a memory game on the app store due to this widespread trademark infringement claim.
Generics only apply to trademark law in the USA. We were bitter about the change - the use of the phrase "memory game" -isn't- trademarked AFAIK, and it seems trite to look at a single word embedded within a much longer title.
Anyhow, our feeling was that this entire fiasco will probably backfire with bad press. We really wanted to change the game only in those territories which are trademarked, but that's not so easy with the current App store model.
For your information, here are the territories at issue:
Armenia, Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Belarus, Belgium, Brazil,Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Egypt, Equador, Estonia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, India, Italy, Latvia,Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Peru, Poland, Portugal, Russian Federation, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine and Venezuela.
We are based in the UK and it made no difference to the takedown notice.
Time for a throwdown (Score:2)
In the US, Hasbro holds the trademark for "Memory" as applied to card matching games. So what happens if Hasbro decides to develop a "Memory" app for the iTunes store? (They already have one for Simon.) Who would Apple decide should win that battle?
"manufactured under license from Ravensburger" (Score:5, Informative)
Myhrvoldism (Score:2)
Not just words (Score:2)
A similar thing happened a few years ago with apps that displayed photos with white borders that were thicker along one edge. Apparently Polaroid have a design patent on that and complained to Apple. End result: apps can be rejected/removed from the App Store if they display a photo with a white border that is thicker along one side.
Something about trademarks and common words? (Score:5, Interesting)
Isn't there something about trademarks and common words not being eligible? Microsoft *almost* lost their Lindows case in a big way because of that. Anyone remember this case? Lindows was being sued by Microsoft, and Lindows was putting forth the argument that Microsoft is not entitled to the name "Windows" as a trademark. Microsoft paid Lindows to change their name and to dropped the case entirely.
That said, Apple is not a court. They are a company which is exposed to legal action by the holder of the trademark "Memory." Rather than take on that challenge for the greater good (something which I am sure Google would do) Apple has decided in favor of avoiding additional legal problems. It is their right to do so.
So, what should these small apps people do? Well, turns out, there is very little they can do. They can (a) license the use of the name Memory for their game (not something I imagine would be profitabe or even allowed) or (b) file a pre-emptive suit for the right to use the name or possibly (c) file a re-examination request with the trademark offices to see if it can get revoked. Of these, I would push in favor of (c) but even then, if successful, unless it were a big news story, Apple would likely ignore your assertion that "they no longer have the rights to that name, so please allow my app into your store."
Thesaurus (Score:2)
I have a feeling Thesaurus.com is going to get many requests for the word Memoey real soon.
Off the top of my head, some alternatives to Memory....
cognizance
memorization
recognition
recollection
retention
I suggest changing memory to "mammary" (Score:2)
As a kind of mass protest AND humor enhancer.
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at the time, the music and computer companies sold such vastly different products that they were each allowed to use the names separately. they also agreed not to enter each others space. Hello, itunes!
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Re:Prior Art... (Score:4, Informative)
Couldn't a Dictionary making company claim Prior Art?
Probably not:
1. This isn't a patent, it's a trademark.
2. Trademarks are allowed to be common names so long as the name doesn't directly relate to the product being sold. For instance, "apple" can be trademarked for computing equipment, but not for fruit.
However, if the name "Memory" appears in any book of common card games as an alternate name of the game "Concentration" prior to the introduction of Hasbro's "Memory", then they're likely to be in trouble.
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Apple didn't 'steal' the name from Apple Music. Trademarks only apply in the field in which you do business. Which was why for a long time Apple computers agreed to stay very far away from music.
Of course, they've now bought Apple Music, so that part is moot.
But Acme Tires can't sue Acme Foods -- because they do business in different fields, there's not as much chance of confusing the one with the other. If Acme Foods
Merely descriptive (Score:2)
Not Apple's fault but Ravensburger's (Score:2)
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Word!
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No, trademark the word "product".
Watch the shit hit the fan.
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Its not a copyright. Its a trademark.
Seriously, is anyone on Slashdot capable of getting even the basics right?
Re:This Gamasutra Article is Misleading. (Score:5, Informative)
As an affected developer (actually from 3 years ago), I can tell you that it is a worldwide removal.