Quoting Charlie McCormack on Wednesday July 19, 2006: | Agreed, but do they have a right to issue me a license to a trademark I | already own? I think not, and to restrict me from selling my trademark | *could* be a spot of trouble for them. Of course they do. A trademark is a defensive right that allows a trademark holder to prevent other parties from passing off using the same distinctive properties of the trademark in a specific field of endeavour. It does not entitle the trademark holder automatic ownership rights to anything with the trademark in it. | Sure they can charge me a fee to manage the DNS record in the main root, but | they have no rights to enforce restrictions on a trademark I own. I can allow people to pay me to tattoo words on my forehead. It doesn't mean Coca-Cola has an automatic right to insist they get their logo up there because they have a trademark. It does however allow them to insist I don't sell a beverage by the name of Coca-Cola. Just because a trademark holder has special rights in terms of exclusivity of using a mark doesn't change any of the other restrictions that exist. kimReceived on Wed Jul 19 2006 - 05:31:23 UTC
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