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#apple#trademark#word#generic#app#inkwell#name#store#going#used

Discussion (13 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
I think holding that kind of power over devices people own is problematic, but I seem to be in the minority here.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_6_POD
[1] https://youtu.be/IzH54FpWAP0&t=530
You lose a trademark if it becomes generic, regardless of how hard you tried to keep it from being so. Obviously if you let a bunch of actual infringements slide you're on the way to becoming generic, but all that matters is whether the trademark IS generic.
But, when lawyers write letters to people saying "you can't say escalator or Zamboni" you can just ignore them. Using a trademark in writing in a way that a trademark owner does not like is not infringement.
https://www.dreyfus.fr/en/2025/03/18/proof-of-use-in-the-uni...
And this is my biggest gripe with products from well-known companies that use already generic terms like "Apple", "Word", "X", or "Inkwell". I understand claiming exclusivity of words like "Microsoft Word", but not for the word "Word" itself.
I remember when the Apple logo stickers Apple packed in had a little (R), which was later dropped, since it's ugly and not legally required. But no doubt some lawyer advised putting it there to begin with.
Mediocre ones seem to cause the most problems.