Ну, началась наша юмористическая рубрика "DTF и авторское право". Сумеешь обосновать, что "квадрат, прямоугольник и дырку от бублика" это часть твоего продукта и в этом есть новизна - вперед. Потом, правда, нужно реально этим пользоватся, и создать "сильную" заявку на товарный знак.
In 1981, Spyderco (founded in 1976 by Sal and Gail Glesser in Golden, Colorado) was granted a U.S. utility patent for the Spyderco Round Hole Opener® (or, as its primarily known in EDC circles, the “Round Hole”). This very same year, Spyderco introduced its first folding knife, the C01 Worker, to the marketplace.
The hole used to be patent protected but the patent has run out. The hole is now trademark protected. The trademark has to be "earned", meaning that the trademark has been used by the company consistently over a longer period of time. If Spyderco would make knives with and without holes, the claim would be weakened. But since all Spyderco knives (with two exceptions) feature a CIRCULAR hole to open the blade, and nobody else uses that hole without giving credit to Spyderco, the claim is strong. Since the hole was patent-protected, nobody could use the hole for 17 years, so Spyderco was able to build a strong claim.
Хочу запатентовать квадрат, прямоугольник и дырку от бублика. Чтобы те, кто делает что-то в этом форм-факторе платили мне роялти
Пока ты только хочешь, другие патентуют.
Кстати, с тебя шесть миллиардов долларов за использование букв «а» и «е» в этом комментарии. Я их запатентовал вчера
Патентую патентование.
Регистрирую патент, что ты импотент...
Ну, началась наша юмористическая рубрика "DTF и авторское право".
Сумеешь обосновать, что "квадрат, прямоугольник и дырку от бублика" это часть твоего продукта и в этом есть новизна - вперед. Потом, правда, нужно реально этим пользоватся, и создать "сильную" заявку на товарный знак.
In 1981, Spyderco (founded in 1976 by Sal and Gail Glesser in Golden, Colorado) was granted a U.S. utility patent for the Spyderco Round Hole Opener® (or, as its primarily known in EDC circles, the “Round Hole”). This very same year, Spyderco introduced its first folding knife, the C01 Worker, to the marketplace.
The hole used to be patent protected but the patent has run out. The hole is now trademark protected. The trademark has to be "earned", meaning that the trademark has been used by the company consistently over a longer period of time. If Spyderco would make knives with and without holes, the claim would be weakened. But since all Spyderco knives (with two exceptions) feature a CIRCULAR hole to open the blade, and nobody else uses that hole without giving credit to Spyderco, the claim is strong. Since the hole was patent-protected, nobody could use the hole for 17 years, so Spyderco was able to build a strong claim.
Комментарий недоступен