Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv,alt.video.ptv.tivo (
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On Fri, 07 Jan 2005 14:56:38 GMT, "C what I mean" <no
spam@frontiernet.net> wrote:
>
>"Lazarus Long" <lazarus@removethiswi.rr.com> wrote in message
>news:uq7tt0lb00d2o0h48i3mmcipqcu1qr4m0b@4ax.com...
>> On 6 Jan 2005 21:40:10 GMT, Stein Hals <stein.news@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>><URL:http
/www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36%7E33%7E2611825,00.html>
>>
>> If there's a reason to not buy Monster Cable's product, this isn't it.
>>
>> Monster's doing what many other companies do/have done. Disney
>> themselves to name one. They're simply protecting their trademark on
>> a product, that like beer (for example) no one really needs or could
>> get by with something much less expensive than the premium brand.
>
>I certainly disagree with your statement that they are simply protecting
>their trademark. "Monster" as a word with a meaning has been around since
>way before them. Using the word Monster depicts something Big or Big and
>Bad.. or.. you get the picture. It would be like trademarking the work
>Dollar or Money or Ring.. and so on.. I agree they should defend against
>anyone using the work Monster in a connotation that would compete with
>Monster Cable or lead people to believe they are affiliated.. But to sue
>over the word Monster when it has nothing to do with the product being sold
>and the word is used in the context that Monster has come to mean over the
>last several hundred years or so, is just plain mean and malicious.
>
>I wouldn't buy their products anyway, but now I can see just how malicious
>they are. Don't know how else to read it.. The legal trademark system was
>not meant to do this type of reckless damage.
>
This is why there are courts and judges.