Forum Moderators: LifeinAsia
Yesterday the company that owns www.bluewidget.com and company name is Blue Widget International attorney sent me a letter saying Blue Widget owns the trademark for the term "Blue Widget" and i am infringing on their trademark.
Am I?
I only use BlueSwidget with the plural of Blue
What should i do?
I have spent alot of money on the domain, building a site on my own (im not a webmaster, but the tips i get at WW helped me get pretty good placement) and advertising.
Any information will be greatly appreciated!
Because you were fully aware of BlueWidget.com, it is considered that you registered the plural version in bad faith - not knowing how trademarks are protected is not a defense here.
To me, this sounds as though you will end up having to hand over your domain name to BlueWidget.com due to trademark infringement. But because you have put a lot of money into BluesWidgets, consult with a lawyer who specialized in trademark law, particularly one who has experience with trademarks on the internet if you can find one.
i also found another company using similar non-plurals in their domain name, wonder if they are going after them also.
my atty is not specialized in this and says a specialist attorney will be very expensive, could be up to $100,000 which i don't have
he says if i am going to back down one way or the other, i should just do it.
the company making the claim says it is because it is creating "consumer confusion"
i wonder if i get domain name with other words added to the domain name if it would help?
this is really making me mad....i am in this to make money, not loose money or file bankruptcy. the last thing i am going to do is get a lawyer rich, i already did that in my divorce, and we ended up settling for what we agreed on when we seperated :)
i wonder if i get domain name with other words added to the domain name if it would help?
If you are thinking "Buy-Blues-Widgets-Here.com", you will still have a trademark issue.
When you are coming up with a new domain name, try not to do it with any of your competitor's URLs in mind. And when you come up with a few, try checking them in the trademark database it see if anyone has registered the same or similar names. This will save you trouble down the road.
found another company using similar non-plurals in their domain name
I would be willing to place money on the fact that this other site received a C&D too. Not all companies vigorously defend their trademarks, but the owner of Blue Widgets obviously does.
lets say i sell hot tub(s)
they register the trademark for hot tubs
i buy website www.hottub.com
someone else has website www.hottubs.net
if i change my website to www.invigoratinghottubs.com i am still using their trademark words hot and tubs in my name
question is that what they have trademarked is just as generic and vague as "hot" "tubs"
do you think i can change my domain names like this and be ok?
I think that you really need to speak to a lawyer. If you can't afford a suitable one (search around) do some research in Google searching for similiar cases (in your country). Perhaps there are some lawyer forums that you can post a question to (anybody know of any?). Responding with a lawyers letter of your own also lets the company know that you are 100% professional and legally aware. Speak to a lawyer.
Before Christmas the Queen lost a court case to possess the domain - www.newzealand.com
Now DVLA (drivers & Vehicles Licensing Authority ) have lost a court case to possess the domain www.dvla.com
In both cases, these were legally obtained and registered by commercial parties - however, Great Britain and DVLA seemed to think that they should have the right to them.
I noticed that the RAC don't have www.RAC.com either.
Boots, are an ISP in Hertfordshire lost their domain, boots.com to Boots the Chemist, under a trademark law.
I guess it depends on how the Judge sees things.
they are unwilling to allow additional descriptive terms in the domain name as well, if their two words touch each other
i have quickly purchased some alternative domain names and will submit them to see if they will allow.....
regardless i can only spend about $1000 max on this....and that won't buy me much in the lawyer world :(
i can only spend about $1000 max on this
This is a good example of "might makes right" in the legal world. The law is relatively unimportant if one side has far deeper pockets - they know they can get what they want by a good bluffing game and threatening to run up the other side's legal fees. It's too bad. Good luck, blonde!
What if the domain name does not have blue widgets in it, but a different kind of name (kinda like Amazon, how the name doesn't relate to the site); and there are two domains that are very similar owned by different companies who are not competing in the same business (name.com and name.net). Could the business who bought their domain before the other one did force the other business to give it up?