▲ | tialaramex 17 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
It doesn't apply to trademarks either but it's convenient to insist that trademark "enforcement" is required if you're either a trademark lawyer looking for more clients or you're an aggressive litigant and you want an excuse so people will forget you're a monster. Oh the Disney corporation had to sue the village primary school because their play used a trademarked name for a folk tale everybody knows about... it's not that they are monsters who care only about money and power, they were forced to secure undisclosed damages and make children cry by some principle of law which definitely exists. Mmm sure. The last time I pointed this out on HN somebody responded with LLM generated nonsense "citing" non-existent US legal cases which they argued somehow prove I'm wrong. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | hnfong 16 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
There is a huge spectrum between suing village kids for trademark infringement, and allowing everyone to misuse and abuse the trademark to the point it becomes a generic term. I don't think I disagree with you generally, but it must be recognized that trademarks are different from copyrights in that there is a mechanism where if you don't assert your rights in the trademarks you could lose them. And, like what the sibling comment said, I'm not going to engage with you on unnamed posts where unnamed people cited some LLM to argue against you... | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | brookst 17 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Well if you’re going to cite unnamed posts where unnamed people cited some LLM to argue against you, obviously you are 100% correct. | |||||||||||||||||
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