JelZe GoldRabbit wrote:It's not copyright, it's trademark infringement, were it not for the fact that Hasbro's "Autobot" trademark is under "Toys and Games" and "AutoBot" is spelled a bit differently, plus it's under "Electronics". That's why it's presumably allowed and has the tm sign.
capellamusic wrote:JelZe GoldRabbit wrote:It's not copyright, it's trademark infringement, were it not for the fact that Hasbro's "Autobot" trademark is under "Toys and Games" and "AutoBot" is spelled a bit differently, plus it's under "Electronics". That's why it's presumably allowed and has the tm sign.
So, if I released a product for a different category and called it DeceptiCon it would be ok?I always thought that couldn't be done.
capellamusic wrote:JelZe GoldRabbit wrote:It's not copyright, it's trademark infringement, were it not for the fact that Hasbro's "Autobot" trademark is under "Toys and Games" and "AutoBot" is spelled a bit differently, plus it's under "Electronics". That's why it's presumably allowed and has the tm sign.
So, if I released a product for a different category and called it DeceptiCon it would be ok?I always thought that couldn't be done.
Predaprince wrote:I am very thankful to have posters like sto_vo_kor_2000 who is so energetic about improving others' understanding and enjoyment of the TF universe
Stormrider wrote:You often add interesting insights to conversations that makes the fledglings think and challenges even the sharpest minds
T-Macksimus wrote:I consider you and editor to be amongst the most "scholarly" in terms of your knowledge, demeanor and general approach
cocolove wrote:So, if I released a product for a different category and called it DeceptiCon it would be ok? I always thought that couldn't be done.
Your missing part of whats been said.
"how generic a word or part of a word is".
Predaprince wrote:I am very thankful to have posters like sto_vo_kor_2000 who is so energetic about improving others' understanding and enjoyment of the TF universe
Stormrider wrote:You often add interesting insights to conversations that makes the fledglings think and challenges even the sharpest minds
T-Macksimus wrote:I consider you and editor to be amongst the most "scholarly" in terms of your knowledge, demeanor and general approach
norwichchris wrote:I vaguely remember doing about this at College. As I understand it the Transformer names most of them anyway are legally owned by Hasbro for example they could no longer call Rodimus, Rodimus Prime anymore due to infringement for some reason.
Predaprince wrote:I am very thankful to have posters like sto_vo_kor_2000 who is so energetic about improving others' understanding and enjoyment of the TF universe
Stormrider wrote:You often add interesting insights to conversations that makes the fledglings think and challenges even the sharpest minds
T-Macksimus wrote:I consider you and editor to be amongst the most "scholarly" in terms of your knowledge, demeanor and general approach
norwichchris wrote:I vaguely remember doing about this at College. As I understand it the Transformer names most of them anyway are legally owned by Hasbro for example they could no longer call Rodimus, Rodimus Prime anymore due to infringement for some reason.
As far as i'm concerned the names autobot/decepticon are owned by Hasbro so I don't think that is technically legal.
In addition you can't use Transformer symbols/images owned by Hasbro for use on websites or redistribute them without there consent.
In regards to the internet I'm also not sure its relevant at the moment as Copyright laws have not yet been "updated" to cope with the digital age.
Updated how? Distributing commercial copyrighted material no matter the medium is illegal, that goes for the internet as well.
norwichchris wrote:Updated how? Distributing commercial copyrighted material no matter the medium is illegal, that goes for the internet as well.
As the internet is getting bigger and bigger everyday images can and have been distributed almost everywhere so. The countries that use the internet need to draft up a legal agreement as most have very different copyright laws or have none at all.
You are correct about the Hotrod name. At the end of the day it is just a name though absolutely anything can be called Hotrod, someone may decide to name there child hotrod is that infringement?
I don't really see what the problem with that is.
Copyright law is international by standard, so it extends borders if the product does as well depending on the country of origin. China, for instance, may be lax in copyright laws, but bootlegs exported will be intercepted and confiscated and the manufacturers prosecuted
It's all about product placement. If many products had the same name at the same time it would not just confuse the consumer, but more importantly it would dilute the economic market. Hench the copyright laws and the trademarks for names and logos. Personal names are exempt (we are not product after all), so you can officially name anyone anything, as long as it's reasonable by the proper authorities.
norwichchris wrote:Copyright law is international by standard, so it extends borders if the product does as well depending on the country of origin. China, for instance, may be lax in copyright laws, but bootlegs exported will be intercepted and confiscated and the manufacturers prosecuted
It is international standard but it is still very difficult to police worldwide. In regards to bootleg products does that apply to Botcons? or custom made Transformers? Also is it legal to take a Transformer mould and repackage/renmae as something else so long as you have Hasbro's permission.
I was merely stating that it is harder to enforce copyright over the Internet and it does need to change for example. Wikileaks distributing sensitive military information and private memos etc. What they did was illegal totally anyway but they could still do it.
It's all about product placement. If many products had the same name at the same time it would not just confuse the consumer, but more importantly it would dilute the economic market. Hench the copyright laws and the trademarks for names and logos. Personal names are exempt (we are not product after all), so you can officially name anyone anything, as long as it's reasonable by the proper authorities.
But surely if you had rights to the name Hotrod first then surely you can still name products that. No one would get confused by say a toy named hotrod and a deodorant??
I agree with what your saying but you have google images where you can download logos and edit them freely is that legal?
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