Trademark News for 02-Jul-2008
- 'Motivated: Lagat eager to compete for the U.S. (Winston-Salem Journal)
Bernard Lagat, with his high leg kick and trademark burst, has become an expert at putting people away in the last laps of races.
'Lagat an Olympian again -- now for America (Sports Illustrated)
With a high leg kick and his trademark burst, Bernard Lagat has become an expert at putting people away in the last lap of races.
'The Search Monitor Releases Proprietary Tools Which Monitor Competitive Advertising & Trademark Violations (PRWeb via Yahoo! News)
The Search Monitor releases three automated monitoring utilities to watch advertisers on sponsored search, blogs, landing pages, and social media: Competitor Monitor, Trademark Monitor, and Affiliate Monitor. Tools are designed for use by SEM and SEO marketers, affiliate managers, and legal compliance teams.
'Hot dogs has evolved into an all-American favorite (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
As we celebrate our nation's beginnings on this Fourth of July, perhaps we should rethink the saying "as American as apple pie." Colonial Americans may have been unanimous in crowning the pastry as their cultural trademark, but statistics show that we are ready for an update. The favored food?
'Apple files trademark suit against iPod repair company (Computer Business Review)
The company said iPod Mechanic's owner Nicholas Woodhams did not have permission to use the trademark. Woodhams had allegedly agreed to stop using the term in 2006 and had reached an agreement with Apple to drop the iPod Mechanic name by January 2007, but did not.
'Competitors Taking Action Against Competitors For Search Ad Trademark Infringement (Search Engine Land)
Search ads trigger trademark lawsuit from rival from News.com reports on another search ad trademark lawsuit. This one differs in that the plaintiff is not suing a search engine, but rather suing his competitor. NameSafe sued LifeLock for allegedly allowing one of their resellers to show search ads with NameSafe's trademarks within the ad copy. The ads were triggered on a search for ...
'Racing under a new flag (Richmond Times-Dispatch)
EUGENE, Ore. With a high leg kick and his trademark burst, Bernard Lagat has become an expert at putting people away in the last lap of races. For this race, though, it was getting ready for the first lap that posed the biggest challenge. He kept telling himself he had to stay focused, not get carried away by what was happening on the track in the moments before the 5,000 meters Monday night at ...
'Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Tue 10th Jan 2006 23:44 UTC, submitted by Derek Newhall (New Mobile Computing)
After 2 years of examination the U.S Patent and trademark Office has reversed its two earlier unofficial decisions and decided that Microsoft's File Allocation Table file system constitutes a "novel and non-obvious" system enabling it to be patented.
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