- Joined
- Aug 3, 2003
- Messages
- 2,909
- Reaction score
- 90
I got a phone call today (no prior contact) from someone claiming he owns the TM to a name I'm using. He essentially just said I'm "on notice" and "what do you intend to do about it?". I said I would look it up at the USPTO and get back to him.
This is a 2 word English phrase, somewhat commonly used for many years. The TM is on file (filed 5 years ago), and is specific to "publishing self help law books".
Yes, that's where this may get interesting - he (claims) to be a famous published author of self help law books covering topics including TM law!
Among other things, he told me that "trademark owners are always entitled to the related domain name", and he "has never heard of any case to the contrary". I pointed out that this rather broad phrase has many uses, and mist of my buyers are not even in the USA; his reply was that his little specific use described in his TM filing entitles him to all possible uses, all around the world.
More facts:
- A British legal firm owns the .NET, all other extensions remain unregistered.
- A US based lawyer owned the name 2 years ago, until this guy called and threatened him and the name was simply dropped.
- Amazon lists him as the author of 8 books, 6 out of print. 2 have the term in question as a subtitle, both out of print.
- He hasn't specifically told me what he wants me to do with the name, but if I ask I want that in writing. If he wants it dropped (yet again), he's not protecting his mark. If he wants to own it, he's attempting a reverse hijack. If he wants me to notify potential buyers of his mark, I'm fine with that.
He ended the 1 hour call with "I'm sending you a letter and I intend to pursue this".
I'm considering putting up a very hard (and very public fight) on this.
Your thoughts?
This is a 2 word English phrase, somewhat commonly used for many years. The TM is on file (filed 5 years ago), and is specific to "publishing self help law books".
Yes, that's where this may get interesting - he (claims) to be a famous published author of self help law books covering topics including TM law!
Among other things, he told me that "trademark owners are always entitled to the related domain name", and he "has never heard of any case to the contrary". I pointed out that this rather broad phrase has many uses, and mist of my buyers are not even in the USA; his reply was that his little specific use described in his TM filing entitles him to all possible uses, all around the world.
More facts:
- A British legal firm owns the .NET, all other extensions remain unregistered.
- A US based lawyer owned the name 2 years ago, until this guy called and threatened him and the name was simply dropped.
- Amazon lists him as the author of 8 books, 6 out of print. 2 have the term in question as a subtitle, both out of print.
- He hasn't specifically told me what he wants me to do with the name, but if I ask I want that in writing. If he wants it dropped (yet again), he's not protecting his mark. If he wants to own it, he's attempting a reverse hijack. If he wants me to notify potential buyers of his mark, I'm fine with that.
He ended the 1 hour call with "I'm sending you a letter and I intend to pursue this".
I'm considering putting up a very hard (and very public fight) on this.
Your thoughts?