Is it illegal to have something say it's Trademarked when it's not. If so, how do I get it TradeMarked?
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Question: Do I have to register my brand name to get trademark rights?
Answer: Not in the United States. Here, you do not need to register a mark to establish rights to it, though registration provides important advantages. Registering a mark means that the registrant is presumed to be the owner of the mark for goods and services specified in the application. This makes proving your rights easier in court.
However, US federal law also provides rights to unregistered (?common law?) marks if they are actually used in commerce. In addition, each state provides local protection for both registered and unregistered marks under regulations governing unfair competition. Most other countries require prior registration to protect a mark.
If you register a trademark with the PTO, you have rights to the mark only in the United States and its territories. If you want protection in other countries, you must register the mark in each country in which you want to protect it. However, you can file a single trademark application that covers all the European countries. Contact an attorney for help on rights and procedures in other countries.
From http://chillingeffects.org/trademark/faq.cgi.
Or just Google it.
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Freakish wrote:
You can use the ™ and © legally but you can't use the ®.
I thought you can use the ® but can't use the TM and C
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Agentpieface wrote:
Freakish wrote:
You can use the ™ and © legally but you can't use the ®.
I thought you can use the ® but can't use the TM and C
no © and ™ are free to use
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Agentpieface wrote:
Freakish wrote:
You can use the ™ and © legally but you can't use the ®.
I thought you can use the ® but can't use the TM and C
Nop, cuz ® is for Registered Trademark.
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You can just trademark something by using ™ symbol if it's not already used. Or you can register it on some .gov website and get to use the ® symbol. It's illegal to use the ® symbol without getting permission for the term from whatever trademark .gov you have to go to. Trademarks only cover names and terms. To prevent legal copy and piracy, use ©, which can only be used legally if you use another .gov site. One of them is as simple as like copyright.gov or whatever, but another is some weird abbreviation.
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