Apple Granted Trademark For Its Stores 272
walterbyrd sends this news from ZDNet:
"The U.S. Patent & Trademark Office approved Apple's request to trademark the design and layout of its stores last week, according to patent office records. ... Apple has requested that no store be allowed to replicate various features, including 'a clear glass storefront surrounded by a panelled facade' or an 'oblong table with stools... set below video screens flush mounted on the back wall.'"
I imagine.... (Score:4, Insightful)
At least you can't say that Apple doesn't learn from their own mistakes.
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Except that's not the lesson Apple needed to learn. Apple copyrighted all their design elements, they just then went and legally licensed [wikipedia.org] them to Microsoft and got a bit upset when Windows didn't turn out to be a cheap knock off of their idea no one would want to buy. Patents wouldn't have helped a bit in this instance because they actually gave Microsoft a license.
As to this case specifically, it sort of depends on how it eventually gets granted, but it appears that Apple is overreaching by a reasonable m
Re:I imagine.... (Score:5, Informative)
... except the degree of copying is vastly overstated by those who always bring it up, and the compensation mysteriously never mentioned. Xerox PARC was inspiration to Apple, not a template which was slavishly imitated.
http://folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macintosh&story=On_Xerox,_Apple_and_Progress.txt
Apple essentially paid for a one-time visit where Jobs and some engineers got to walk around a Xerox facility getting demos and taking notes. That's not enough to, ahem, xerox an OS. Not even if you end up hiring a few people away from Xerox (as Apple did). You need continuous hardware and software access to do a good job of copying. What Apple got was... a little less than that. (Amusingly enough, one Apple engineer mistakenly thought he saw the Xerox GUI doing something it actually couldn't, inspiring him to invent one of the cornerstones of Apple's early lead in GUI technology, QuickDraw regions.)
Apple copied almost nothing at the detailed level. I've seen a video of Jobs discussing how, during that visit, he completely missed what was, to him, in retrospect the most important thing about the Xerox GUI: that it was built in a dynamic object oriented language and runtime environment, Smalltalk. The Macintosh GUI was coded in a mix of Pascal and 68K assembly instead, and suffered a lot of long term problems as a result.
(Jobs went on to fix that mistake in his second try at creating a GUI computer at NeXT. His team didn't use Smalltalk as its dynamic OOP language, but it did use one heavily inspired by Smalltalk, Objective-C. Although NeXT was more or less a failure as a computer manufacturer, the software tech worked out pretty well in the long run: OS X and iOS are both direct descendants.)
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Oh joy, this version of history, as explained by slashdot yet again...
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I hate to do this cuz it annoys the piss out of me, but *citation needed*
It's well known that Xerox parc demoed it, and the person running the demo was screaming bloody murder to her management team telling them they were giving away their future, but management insisted upon it. Apple didn't pay one red cent. Cash, stock or otherwise.
Re:I imagine.... (Score:5, Informative)
Jobs and several Apple employees including Jef Raskin visited Xerox PARC in December 1979 to see the Xerox Alto. Xerox granted Apple engineers three days of access to the PARC facilities in return for the option to buy 100,000 shares (800,000 split-adjusted shares) of Apple at the pre-IPO price of $10 a share.[40] Jobs was immediately convinced that all future computers would use a graphical user interface (GUI), and development of a GUI began for the Apple Lisa.[41]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Inc [wikipedia.org].
Happy?
Re:I imagine.... (Score:4, Informative)
Did you not even read it? Xerox said that to get access to the facilities they had to be paid in stock options. And it wasn't buying it at the "going rate". The quote even says "at the pre-IPO price of $10 a share". That's some pretty bad reading comprehension on your part.
Re:I imagine.... (Score:5, Informative)
It wasn't for sale to the public, so going rate is meaningless. Xerox e executives obviously saw enough promise in them that they were willing to invest a million dollars in them and share their technology with them. Because that's actually the gist of the transaction. Apple didn't sell any goods or services - they took an investment.
Xerox cashed out following iPo. Should they have held, that million would be worth 365 million now.
Yes, parc employees weren't happy about it, but management makes the decisions for better or for worse.
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The IPO price wasn't thought of a year before they went public.
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I believe it was the large purchase of non-voting stock (and very publicly) for a minimum of X years in exchange for not suing.
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OK, that's new... Citation needed on that one...
Re:I imagine.... (Score:5, Informative)
How is it new?
Apple had agreed to license certain parts of its GUI to Microsoft for use in Windows 1.0, but when Microsoft made changes in Windows 2.0 adding overlapping windows and other features found in the Macintosh GUI, Apple filed suit. Apple added additional claims to the suit when Microsoft released Windows 3.0.
...
Much of the court's ruling was based on the original licensing agreement between Apple and Microsoft for Windows 1.0, and this fact made the case more of a contractual matter than of copyright law, to the chagrin of Apple. This also meant that the court avoided a more far-reaching "look and feel copyright" precedent ruling. However, the case did establish that the analytic dissection (rather than the general "look and feel") of a user interface is vital to any copyright decision on such matters.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Computer,_Inc._v._Microsoft_Corporation [wikipedia.org]
Only people who never actual read the ruling of the case think it had to do with being unable to copyright look-and-feel.
Apple's Revenge! (Score:3)
I wonder if they've also accidentally given Microsoft a perpetual license to the look-and-feel of their stores?
I doubt it reading the summary suggests that this might be Apple's revenge:
Apple has requested that no store be allowed to replicate various features, including 'a clear glass storefront surrounded by a panelled facade'
In other words they have managed to trademark windows! ;-)
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I've been visiting Slashdot for quite a number of years now, and I don't agree with this assessment. Slashdot used to be a bunch of cranky Linux / Open Source guys, mixed with some unix graybeards. Now the place is overrun with foaming-at-the-mouth Android fans, intent on berating anything that isn't Android.
I realize that this sounds ridiculous when applied to Slashdot, but truth be told, the quality of discourse around these parts has gone into the shitter in the last two years or so.
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That sounds like the layout for a "free" clinic. You know , where you go if you think you got syphilis.
"Free clinics" have an all glass front with lots of tables visible from outside? Are you sure you didn't enter an Apple Store the last time you thought you had syphilis?
Daft! (Score:2)
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Note that coffee shops are not in the same "trade" as an Apple store, so they are not impacted.
Now, if Apple had requested a servicemark instead of a trademark, that would be a different story ... but a service mark is much harder to get.
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Now, if Apple had requested a servicemark instead of a trademark, that would be a different story ... but a service mark is much harder to get.
How much harder exactly? Because they got one:
Owner Name: Apple Inc.
Legal Entity Type: CORPORATION
...
US Serial Number: 85036990
US Registration Number: 4277914
Register: Principal
Mark Type: Service Mark
http://tsdr.uspto.gov/#caseNumber=85036990&caseType=SERIAL_NO&searchType=statusSearch [uspto.gov]
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You must be new here. You don't exactly expect people to RTFA do you?
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I've never seen a coffee shop that would be confused with an Apple store. You do know that's the idea behind trademarks, right? To protect a brand by not confusing customers as to who they're doing business with, who made a product, etc?
You can have a restaurant with the letter M in it; just don't make it look too much like the Golden Arches and you won't have a problem with McDonalds.
Apple's done it again! (Score:4, Funny)
An oblong table? Any idiot could think of that. But an oblong table with stools and screens nearby? That's the genius of Apple.
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An oblong table? Any idiot could think of that. But an oblong table with stools and screens nearby? That's the genius of Apple.
I just assume you forgot the quotes around "genius".
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I just assume you forgot the quotes around "genius".
I just assume you paid Apple royalties for use of the word "genius"
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There goes my study. An oblong desk with a stool in front of it and a wall mounted monitor.
For the record, the desk is cluttered with motorbike magazines and raspberry pi peripherals.
Inaccurate Summary (Score:5, Insightful)
In this case the trademark is defined by the illustration, which is basically a line drawing of an Apple Store minus the logo. The text in the summary is drawn from the "description of mark" field, which is just a description of the image and does not define the trademark. Further, the summary suggests that Apple is individually claiming trademark protection on various features of its store design ('clear glass storefront...' or an 'oblong table with stools...'). This is not the case. The trademark claims the entire design as a whole.
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that may be true but can you explain to me how this windows store would not infringe
pricture of a windows store [flickr.com]
regards
John Jones
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that may be true but can you explain to me how this windows store would not infringe
pricture of a windows store [flickr.com]
regards
John Jones
From the textual description of the mark:
The picture you link to shows a store whose storefront has the horizontal panel but AFAICT is lacking the narrower side panels described. Also, without being able to see inside the store, it is impossible to tell if the arrangement of lighting, ta
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This photo was taken on July 29, 2012 in Wenonah, Minneapolis, MN, US, using an Apple iPhone 4.
I guess even then Apple was directionally impaired. That's the bloody Mall of America in Bloomington, MN. And, I must say, when I saw that Microsoft was adding that store right next to Apple's I found myself laughing to tears. It made my night. Even now I get a snicker out of it when ever I walk by.
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can you explain to me how this windows store would not infringe
The same way a Surface tablet doesn't infringe: It's got the Microsoft logo on it. Ditto for any other generic item. AFAIK nobody enforces a generic design patent on clamshell-style laptops. You can tell who made it because of the trademarked logo on it.
Of course IANAL, but I always thought the test of a trademark violation was whether or not customers would be confused. Nobody in their right mind would be confused by these two stores. A
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The same way a Surface tablet doesn't infringe: It's got the Microsoft logo on it. Ditto for any other generic item. AFAIK nobody enforces a generic design patent on clamshell-style laptops. You can tell who made it because of the trademarked logo on it.
Totally, totally wrong. With design patents (which is what the Surface could potentially infringe on), company logos, written product names et cetera are expressly excluded from the design patent. Putting another company logo on the device is the one thing that cannot protect you from infringement claims.
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explain to me how this windows store would not infringe
pricture of a windows store [flickr.com]
The Apple store has fewer blurry faces in front. Their customers must be more attractive.
Re:Inaccurate Summary (Score:5, Informative)
Indeed, FTFTM:
Description of Mark: The mark consists of the design and layout of a retail store. The store features a clear glass storefront surrounded by a paneled facade consisting of large, rectangular horizontal panels over the top of the glass front, and two narrower panels stacked on either side of the storefront. Within the store, rectangular recessed lighting units traverse the length of the store's ceiling. There are cantilevered shelves below recessed display spaces along the side walls, and rectangular tables arranged in a line in the middle of the store parallel to the walls and extending from the storefront to the back of the store. There is multi-tiered shelving along the side walls, and a oblong table with stools located at the back of the store, set below video screens flush mounted on the back wall. The walls, floors, lighting, and other fixtures appear in dotted lines and are not claimed as individual features of the mark; however, the placement of the various items are considered to be part of the overall mark.
Acquired Distinctiveness Claim: In whole
This is presumably an attempt to deter/combat the copycats that have actually tried to trick people into thinking they're Apple stores.
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The text is a non-specific, non-technical description of the drawing which is the thing that is actually trademarked.
To use a car analogy, let's say Apple designs a sleek car with rounded corners and a minimal interface. They apply for and receive a trademark on the schematic of their design, and the text in that trademark application describes the schematic as referring to "a motor vehicle with 2 doors and 4 wheels capable of travel on roads, with a sleek aerodynamic surface, minimalist design, and rounde
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I wonder how many elements can or cannot match? For example, if instead of an oblong tables I use a rectangular ones, would that be ok? :-)
ahh I was wondering (Score:2, Funny)
I was wondering where the next "innovation" would take place. I suppose the next "innovation" in their store will be that it is 10% smaller and allows voice commands.
Everyone will complain... (Score:2)
Everyone will complain, but if I asked you to name one consumer tech company that does things most differently than any other, you'd say Apple. Why should Apple not enjoy the protection of these differences--which clearly make them very successful? I don't have a solution in particular here, but it's hard to claim that Apple has nothing to pursue here.
windows stores... (Score:2, Interesting)
look exactly the same...
so thats going to be fun for them !
picture of a windows store next to apple store [flickr.com]
regards
John Jones
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look exactly the same...
According this service mark, no, they don't, so there shouldn't be any conflicts. As the service mark says, it must be considered in whole, not in part, and the Microsoft stores do not demonstrate all of the aspects detailed in Apple's service mark.
Moreover, if they did demonstrate everything in Apple's service mark, wouldn't that be a compelling argument for why Apple should be filing this sort of paperwork in the first place? After all, they have a brand to protect, and part of that is ensuring that other
Sorry to break up the Apple hate (Score:5, Informative)
But Microsoft trademarked their store design too, and had it granted in 2011. This looks much like return fire, and not an opening shot.
http://tsdr.uspto.gov/#caseNumber=85194406&caseType=SERIAL_NO&searchType=statusSearch [uspto.gov]
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http://linuxman.blogsome.com/images/linuxstore.png [blogsome.com]
The USPTO does not "approve" trademarks. (Score:5, Informative)
Nor does it "grant" them. It registers them. They are created by use.
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Your post goes over most of their heads. Many don't even know the difference between a patent and trademark.
Bad summary (Score:2)
The summary makes this sound much worse than it actually is. To be infringing, a store would have to:
1. Have the same arrangement of windows (not just the single large panel mentioned in the summary, but also the smaller side panels), *and*
2. Have cantilevered shelves, *and*
3. Have multiple rectangular tables, *and*
4. Have flush-mounted video screens on the rear wall.
It's possible a court *might* hold that something hitting 3 out of 4 of these was confusingly similar, but by no means certain. Courts aren'
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Come on ... almost no-one (if anyone) has even the first point ...
It's a specific arrangement of vertical glass panels from floor to door height across the full frontage of the store and supplemented by horizontal glass panels from top of the door to the ceiling and 2 narrow panels either side of the store front.
Cantilevered shelves along the walls are pretty rare. Flush-mounted video screen less so and tables are pretty much the common one (although they need to running solely front to back which is quite
Re:Bad summary (Score:5, Funny)
Courts aren't stupid.
Citation?
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Something like this?
http://tsdr.uspto.gov/documentviewer?caseId=sn85194406&docId=DRW20101213072755 [uspto.gov]
That's Microsoft's store layout trademark they registered in 2011.
Samething, minus the glass out front.
Just to clarify: Service Mark (Score:5, Informative)
The summary gives the impression this is a patent, but the /. article title says trademark. Actually, according to the linked USPTO file [uspto.gov], it's a service mark.
I had once considered applying for a registered trademark for the FreeDOS Project, [freedos.org] just to protect the name. To be clear, a registered trademark is R not TM. But the Apple file is a service mark, or SM. To simplify, a SM is basically the same as a TM, but the understanding is a SM will be for a short term use, for various definitions of "short term" (usually a SM is applied to an advertising slogan, like Walmart's "Save money. Live better.")
First of all, to apply for either mark in the US, you need to pay a fee to the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). But even if you file, there is the issue of diligence. If there's a violation (someone uses that trademark or service mark without permission) the mark holder fails to prosecute or take action, the mark can be found in a court to be unprotected and open for use. There are other ways to lose a mark as well.
However, it is not necessary to register a mark with the USPTO in order to claim it as a trademark or service mark. The USPTO says any time you claim rights in a mark, you may use the "TM" (trademark) or "SM" (service mark) designation to alert the public to your claim, regardless of whether you have filed an application with the USPTO.
Owning a mark registration on the Principal Register does give you several things:
So really what Apple is doing here is registering the layout and design of their store as a service mark (an identity) so that if someone else comes along and uses the same layout and design, Apple can make a stronger case to sue them. The legal theory is that you could have looked up the service mark to see if someone else was using it so it's harder to defend yourself if you are found to be infringing. Not impossible to defend, just harder.
Companies do this kind of thing all the time. It just doesn't usually hit the news. Coke has a registered mark on the shape their bottle, for example.
This isn't an Apple patent, it's not an abuse of the patent system. It's just a service mark.
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Pepsi also made a distinctive bottle shape. While not as distinctive as the Coca-cola bottle, it still is a distinguishing characteristic if you happen to pick up the bottle. Essentially, the bottle is the logo or "brand" of the respective companies.
If somebody else, even a computer vending company of some sort like Dell or HP comes along and builds a store with a somewhat similar layout to sell their products, the question really becomes how much is too much to confuse customers into thinking it is the s
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The summary gives the impression this is a patent
No, it doesn't. Read it again.
This is common (Score:2)
practice in the restaurant industry. Lots of times you can tell exactly what fast food place they are building just by the shape. MS would just need to change one or two cosmetic things to not violate if they do already anyway. Not much to see here.
Not the same thing at all (Score:2)
I can see golden arches being a trademark, but not a glass storefront.
Name me a restaurant that has trademarked something like a glass storefront? And tell me how common that is.
Trademarks not constitutionally enabled per se (Score:2)
In the US, patents and copyrights are clearly enabled constitutionally by the "copyright clause" - article 1, section 8, clause 8, which in its entirety states:
Trademarks are not so enabled per se. Lawmakers saw an open door in the "commerce clause" - article 1, section 8, clause 3, which in its entirety states:
So Funny (Score:2)
The Setup of the Apple store is the general way mobile phone stores have been setup here for several years. Colors and textures might be different - however the layout and form (of the tables / displays) of the stores are pretty much identical.
I am still amazed some of the patents are handed out in the USA.
so (Score:2)
Now we need to do a trademark search every time we design a desk layout: is square monitor with square table taken?
Patented customer service? (Score:2, Funny)
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The saving grace is that this was granted by the US PTO. As far as I can tell, it's not directly applicable in the land of all of those retailers, and I hope that maybe the UK IPO has the good sense to say "Fuck right off" to APL.
Well, I can hope, can't I?
Re:A store cannot look like a store? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:A store cannot look like a store? (Score:4, Insightful)
Which is why this issuance of a trademark is so utterly silly. A patent and a copyright have time limits in exchange for a monopoly.... you give something to the world in exchange for exclusive rights.
A trademark on the other hand is indefinitely perpetual. In most cases it is a name, and most correctly used as an adjective such as "Apple computers" or "Band-Aid adhesive bandages" as in "I'm going to buy an Apple-brand computer". Trademarking a logo is certainly in the same realm as it is something distinctive which sets that business apart from others in the same trade.
This still smells strongly like a patent though or at least a misapplication of trademarks. I understand that the point is about how the store has a very distinctive look where somebody walking into a store with a similar layout with similar furniture and materials might think they are actually in an Apple store when in fact they are selling something else, like a Mapple computer [wikia.com]. Then again, IKEA tried to do the same thing with STØR [wikipedia.org] and was successful on a legal front of defending that trademark.
I still think it is abuse of the concept though. A store layout might be patentable and perhaps even deserves limited protection if it proves to be successful in moving merchandise more efficiently than their competitors. It doesn't deserve to have perpetual protection though. That is why there is confusion here, particularly because the same organization which grants patents is granting this horrible abuse of trademarks.
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This has nothing to do with patents. The title of the submission even says "trademark" quite clearly. Are you illiterate?
Re:A store cannot look like a store? (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple stores do have a distinctive look, and I can't fault them for wanting to keep that unique. I don't think they're trying at all to claim the individual features, but the overall architecture created by a combination of features.
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Re:A store cannot look like a store? (Score:4, Informative)
Apple stores do have a distinctive look
Yep they don't look like any store, they look like every mobile phone store in most countries.
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It's cool if you're not familiar with Soma architecture, no big deal unless you live there. But don't go posting poorly-researched links attempting to show off knowledge you don't have.
The first link, a restaurant, actually does look somewhat similar to Apple's style tho less shiny. Second one isn't even a coffee shop. Third one does illustrate the danger of sweeping generalizations like "every coffee shop" - Soma also includes a fair number of places whose architecture might best be described as "greasy
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I don't think HMV will have to worry about if for long.. even if the trademark could be enforced in the UK, Ireland, Singapore and Hong Kong.
First TFA, then TFS (summary), now TFH (Headline) (Score:2)
If for some reason you can't be troubled that much, the Headline should be in your window's title bar. Unless you're using one of those browsers that's way too cool for a title bar.
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This sounds like one of those patents
It's not a patent.
Apple Granted Trademark For Its Stores
*facepalm*
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We've given MS a lot shit over the years.
That might be understatement of the day. ;)
Lately, though, MS seems tame (as they are not a serious player in the markets that matter) compared to some of these companies of today.
Believe it or not, they're doing quite well for themselves.
http://arstechnica.com/business/2013/01/microsoft-fails-to-notice-the-death-of-the-pc-posts-record-revenue-figures-instead/ [arstechnica.com]
I should have known nobody wants to hear that, before I submitted it. I'm a dummy.
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Apple doesn't have much longer I think. They are going to lose with all this Android battling in the end. There are simply too many device makers out there and Google is simply smarter. The fan base of Apple iDevices has been shrinking and people stopped celbrating each new thing long ago. I haven't seen a line outside of an Apple store in I don't know how long.
Steve Jobs died of his own stupidity. Thinking different, he tried unconventional attempts at beating a treatable form of cancer. Not all of h
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One thing I've learned since my first computer (Vic-20) is never bet against Apple. Or at least don't make stupid predictions about them. Comments like "No wireless, less space than a Nomad. Lame." were lame at the time and on the wrong side of history.
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Steve was a shrewd business man, a smart man, a genius, a visionary he was not. He was just able to play the heartless CEO game with the best.
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He did have the advantage of being rich enough to buy medical treatment and a transplant organ that most people in his situation could expect. Even with all that, he wasn't particularly far outside the statistical norms.
In any case, whether Steve Jobs possessed amazing marketing/business acumen, or just a cult of personality, Apple's fortunes seem to have risen and fallen based on whether or not he was at the helm. As he's no longer at the helm, Apple could potentially be in trouble in the mid to long term.
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No ... no patent was asked for, and none was given.
They trademarked (not patented) a particular set of features, which is fairly common. It only prevents people in the same trade from incorporating the same combination of distinctive features and leaves the enforcement up to Apple's expense to detect and pursue.
Car examples:
Much like Jeep trademarking vehicle's with a "7 vertical slot grill between a pair of round headlights" or Harley Davidson trademarking the sound of their V-twin motorcycles.
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s/vehicle\'s/vehicles/g
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All of that is true, but what is the trade this trademark is applied to? It is not computers and technology. The trade in question is a storefront, so technically, any retail store front that has those features come into conflict with the trademark regardless of whether they sell computers or not.
Retail store services featuring computers, computer software, computer peripherals, mobile phones, consumer electronics and related accessories, and demonstration of products relating thereto
But, you just descirbed Best Buy and almost any electronic boutique. I am prety sure that if somebody opens a juice bar (maybe calling it the Orange Store) and designs it to look like an Apple Store, Apple will enforce there trademark (or try to) even though Orange Julius doesn't sell computers or electronics.
Trademark enforcement goes a lot further than the actual product or trade it was given for. McDonalds agressively went after other businesses named MacDonalds, even though that was the name of the fa
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No, they didn't patent anything. They did obtain a trademark, though. Something completely different. You failed at reading comprehension in school, didn't you?
Re:What in the fuck? (Score:5, Insightful)
The bowing to the excesses and insanity of capitalism has reached bizarre extremes. This is how little kids act. "Mommy! Jimmy is COPYING me! Make him PAY!"
FTFY
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I guess, for these companies, a sales ban is worse than a fine.
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So somebody should be able to set up an exact replica of an Apple store?
Previously there was nothing stopping resellers from doing exactly that, slapping Apple logos all over the place and dressing staff in apple branded clothes.
You can understand why Apple do not want people tricked into fake Apple stores but unfortunately trademark is just about the only way of protecting against this.
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In terms of store layout and design, of course. Naturally. Any other questions?
Are you daft? That would be outright fraud on the face of it. Even making the sign on the front of the store say "Apple" would be obvious fraud. You don't need trademarks on the GODDAM LAYOUT AND DESIGN OF A STORE to protect against that kind of thing.
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Are you daft?
No ... and I can be polite and courteous in a discussion
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I'll give you points for civility if you give me points for being right. I told you how they already had protection against the fraud of somebody pretending to be an Apple store, without the silly trademark on the store design and layout.
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Yes they are certainly covered against direct fraud - definitely can not claim to be an apple store.
But in many countries (and mine, Australia, is one of them) there have certainly been instances of resellers copying the look and feel of a store in a deliberate attempt to allow naive consumers to be confused into thinking it is an official Apple store. There are no direct claims so it is not fraud.
One solution is to eliminate those resellers - but grey market channels and non-resellers are always a problem.
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So instead of arguing the valid point that there are other protections for Apple besides this trademark, you instead attack the messenger. That doesn't really sound polite.
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Re:What in the fuck? (Score:5, Insightful)
You think that their store layout is somehow unique? Except that there are iToys on the tables instead of painted miniatures and dungeon layouts, and the posters on the wall are made with LCD screens instead of paper this is the exact same layout as the game shop down the hill from my house. Well, except that the Apple store doesn't have a carpet full of Doritos crumbs and spilled Mountain Dew.
Yes it is in the context of the trademark application ... Have a read of it
It covers a very specific COMBINATION of Apple's glass frontage design, lighting and shelving NOT THE BASIC LAYOUT ... it is a combination that you would not stumble upon unless you were DELIBERATELY trying to pass yourself off as an Apple store.
Your local games shop is not pretending to be an Apple store (and certainly does not have that specific combination of elements) so is not covered my the trademark - no drama !
Having said that I am certainly no fan of Apple but do understand they want protection against obvious fraudsters who try to pass themselves off Apple stores.
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"trademark is just about the only way of protecting against this."
So true.
I would also like to point out that copyright protection for Taxi Driver (until the year 2120 or so) is about the only way to protect against people signing Martin Scorsese's name to checks.
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I guess we don't just all passively accept it being rammed down our throats, as the tone of your post suggests we should. You're either part of the resistance or part of the problem.
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Apple copied every other fucking phone maker before that enough with apple fan boy propaganda. The Design is NOT new.
I don't know about their phone, but I know the design of their stores isn't unique. I was eating at lunch counters while sitting on a stool. It even had a multi-media device (you did have to put a nickle in it, though). And they had blinds because the sun would shine through the front glass window. Granted, back then, our "pads" were usually yellow with lines on them but they did have a #2 stylus for work that you wanted to be read-writable or for write-once you had a choice of pen computing in either blu
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Unless those bar/pub's are retailing computers/tablets/phones (who knows, maybe they are), they are not in the same "trade" as an Apple store and would not be affected.
Trademarks are specific to a single trade.
Servicemarks are broader, but also much more difficult to acquire.
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When has that ever stopped Apple?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Inc._litigation#Trademark [wikipedia.org]
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Those extreme yogurt places [...]
Different field. Has nothing to do with computers.
Or - better yet - boycott Apple (Score:2)
Apple deserves to be boycotted for a dozen reasons, at least.
I stopped buying Apple years ago, couldn't be happier about my decision.
Now that Android has caught up with iOS, and you can get a $250 Chromebook, who needs Apple?
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Or boycott Google for selling ads as a business model? To each his own. Enjoy your Chromebook. Unlike you, I'm not going to go around telling people what they should like and I'll just keep using this MacBook Pro Retina display at 6x the cost of your Chromebook.