But Army Builder? Look on the web site and see if you can find a place where Army Builder it is a ___. It is described as a "tool" and it is used for "army construction" according to the website. Somehow, I don't think "army tool" is sufficiently descriptive, and "army constructor" is an odd neologism. "Army construction tool" is, I'm going to say, a burdensome phrase. "Army list calculator" is the closet thing I can find to a useful synonym, and that doesn't convey the idea that it stores data used in the calculations.
You missed Army Maker. In short, I'd agree with you if it would clearly make it hard to communicate what a product does, but army constructor doesn't feel like a neologism, it's definitely not what I would call and awkward euphemism. We'll just have to agree to disagree on this.
guivre said:It doesn't really matter. I won't stop using the term. I doubt others will either and I'll encourage them to every chance I get. I'll consider it my tiny contribution to ensuring the phrase is genericized.
If I decide to create an army builder you can bet I'll name it Guivre's Army Builder or something similar and invite Lone Wolf to sue me.
This, I believe, would not contribute to so-called generizide. As long as Lone Wolf is educating people, even if you disagree with the fact that it's a trademark, by posting your opinion her in this forum you recognize it as a trademark. The existence of this very thread means more people are becoming aware. I may be wrong about this, but having "contempt" for a trademark is not the same as not recognizing a trademark. I don't think a judge or jury would be sympathetic to someone actually trying to make a trademark generic.
(People should never assume these posts would ever be ignored by a lawsuit. When I looked into the WoTC lawsuits, I noticed at least one defendant's post was used in the complaint on a message board.)
S'mon said:Wow, that is really misleading! That's not what generic means at all. A generic term is simply one that is general, common, or inclusive rather than specific, unique, or selective. A generic mark is thus one incapable of distinguishing the origin of goods/services as coming from a particular company.
Understood. I'll gladly admit to being wrong about that.
It may not have legal value, but my own judgements come if a descriptive trademark is good or bad comes from how easilly you can use another term to describe something. But then again, that's not a legal opinion.
falcarrion said:Here is an actual arrest made on trademark infrigment that happen in Chicago on Feb 4.
People need to know that serious Trademark violations like that do have severe consequences. Passing off your goods as somebody else's is akin to Identity Theft.
There was a family that owned a Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise and had three restaurants in the surrounding towns around here. At some point, there was some dispute between the family and KFC, and they lost the rights to KFC. The family continued to operate as KFC for over a year. Finally, US Marshalls had to come in and seize all the stuff that indicated the KFC trademark or franchise--signs, any products with the trademarked logos, etc.
S'Mon said:*Wow, Playboy sure like to litigate!
Well, I believe in part Playboy wants to prevent their trademark from becoming a generic term for nude cheescake magazines or porn, which it was in danger of, at least back when there were fewer of those types of magazines. So I can understand why they take those steps.