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Black Beauty? I thought it was a bowling ball. Doc
Guess I had the same thought Bob did, just saw it as a color description. I'm on the road until Sunday night and will make the appropriate change in our website. Honestly, this was my mistake. I don't think anyone was out to disparage either of you, didn't really think the word "cherry" described either of your products beyond the casework. Sorry for the confusion.
"...Yes, I know it's a tube amp, but to have the Cherry name associated with <potentially disparaging remark removed> is just <potentially disparaging remark removed>...."
You pour your heart and soul into your company, develop technology over many years of exhausting work, and build a brand from scratch to market your products.....
I'm resisting the urge to be pedantic. Doc
Actually, the English language has separated the two very nicely. In the case of DAC's Cherry amplifier, it's used as a noun.In the case of Carver's amp, the Cherry 180, it's used as an adverb.There is no case.Wayner
.....And you don't bother to Trademark the name of the company's product? I don't mean to be harsh personally to you in any way, but unfortunately the judgement of your lack of foresight here is harsh by nature. I'd have to go along with the other's opinions here in that it prolly hasn't caused major financial harm so far, which would be fortunate. However I'd have to point out another potential error, you've notified the larger company, the one with significantly more resources, that there may be a Trademark issue between you when previous to that email they viewed it as a description of color. You haven't heard from their President because he's busy having his attorneys apply for that Trademark before you do, or at the very least weigh in with their opinions on what action to take before replying to you. I cannot fathom why you wouldn't be following the same course of action as I write this, other than it's the weekend. It may indeed be just a color description to them, but for you it's your livelihood.Please be assured that these harsh judgments are made in your best interest in an effort to have you protect your product name, and not any attack on your character. I don't own any of your products, but you're part of the AC family and I would be deeply concerned if I were you. As it costs virtually nothing to act now, today, to make efforts at protecting your interests, I urge you to do so. All the best.
Prior User vs. Federal Registrant: Whose Mark Is It, Anyway? By Keith A. Barritt It is commonly assumed that once a federal trademark registration is obtained it confers the exclusive right to use the mark on particular goods or services and can readily prevent use by any other party. Indeed, the Trademark Act appears to say precisely that. However, trademark law is not quite so easy, and in fact having a trademark registration - even a valid and "incontestable" one - does not guarantee the exclusive right to use the mark in all circumstances. Unlike many countries, the United States confers trademark rights by use of the mark. At the outset, trademark "registration" is little more than a formal acknowledgement of rights already in existence. This contrasts sharply with patents, which actually grant substantive rights the patentee otherwise would never have. There are many benefits to federally registering a trademark, one of the most important being that it empowers the Patent and Trademark Office ("PTO") to police the mark by rejecting subsequent applications to register marks that conflict with the registered mark. Registration also affords the mark certain evidentiary presumptions of validity, confers constructive use of the mark as of the application's filing date, and creates nationwide constructive notice of registration (thereby preventing subsequent "innocent" adoption of the registered mark). Ownership of a registration, however, does not by itself answer the question of who has the right to use the mark. Who is a Prior User? Under common law, trademark rights within a certain territory are based on priority of use of a mark within that territory. Sometimes a federal registrant is not the first user of a mark in a territory, and that an unregistered prior user may have superior rights, at least in that territory. Determining the rights of the parties in such situations requires a careful evaluation of often complex facts and always complex law.[Unquote]http://www.fr.com/Prior-User-vs-Federal-Registrant--Whose-Mark-Is-It-Anyway1/munosmario
you should understand the harm in keeping it bottled upwayne, did you mean adjective? well, maybe if listening to the amp made you feel all rosy and warm, it would be cheery and cherry at the same time dammit Wayne, you beat me to it,
If I was the Cherry amp guy, I'd be more worried about Bruno Putzeys than Bob Carver.