Spam Lawsuit's Last Laugh is at Hormel's Expense 172
Brian Cartmell writes "An article at the Minneapolis — StarTribune site covers a significant setback for the Hormel food company, in a case that's being closely watched by security companies across the country. Seattle-based Spam Arrest has gone up against the creator of the food substance in court, fighting for the right to use the word spam in its company name. The US Trademark Trial and Appeal board has sided with the spam fighters, agreeing that consumers of the Spam product would never confuse the food with junk email. 'Derek Newman, Spam Arrest's attorney, said the decision opens the door for many other anti-spam software companies ... "Spam Arrest fought this battle for the whole software industry," Newman said.'"
How very noble of them (Score:4, Interesting)
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-mcgrew
(Spam sucks but it's better than.. er, hell I don't know but it has to be better than something.)
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At whose expense? (Score:5, Insightful)
Plus, I don't know if it should really be considered a victory for the software industry that companies don't have to come up with creative names.
Re:At whose expense? (Score:4, Insightful)
SPAM was a potted meat UNTIL it became part of the neolexicon... and hormel wanted to
cash in on the name despite (or because of) the declining popularity of the meat(ish) product.
If Hormel had actively tried to market its meat product USING the new definition of the word,
perhaps in a clever TV or print campaign, they might actually capitalize.
Instead, meh... They try to push the legal envelope and get a paper cut. Potted meatheads.
Re:At whose expense? (Score:5, Funny)
And spam is spam precisely because of the negative connotations. How are they going to market that? Buy our processed meat! It's like junk mail, but you can eat it!
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Re:At whose expense? (Score:4, Informative)
Well... not exactly. Spam email got its tag from Monty Python's Spam skit*, not from someone's recollection of how SPAM tastes (At least not directly).
*(if you are a true geek, you would know exactly why that would be an apt application).
FWIW, SPAM (the potted meat) is still considered a tasty thing along the left-hand side of the Pacific Rim.
Re:At whose expense? (Score:5, Informative)
Wow, you really just got that information from a doctor with a glove, didn't you?
Hormel actually 'got it' pretty early on, and had a good sense of humor about it, too. They're in a bind, of course, because they don't want to lose the trademark for the meat, but they don't want to lose the goodwill of the community by acting all RIAA-like. (Ironically, their meat itself is NOT in a bind. (Little sausage-casing humor there.))
So at first, they said "Look, just use lower case letters for the e-mail, and we'll use capital letters for our product." But that didn't really work, because nobody could remember which was which, and everyone always likes to capitalize Internet terms that aren't acronyms.
So then they said "OK, just don't trademark it yourself."
Now they're losing that case. (Ironically, their meat itself is NOT in a case. (Little sausage-binding humor there.))
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Considering you're mixing patents, trademarks, and copyright (via "fair use"), I think we can safely file your legal opinion under "talking out my ass".
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Oh I beg to differ! (Score:5, Funny)
I went to see Spam-a-lot in the theatre. Much to my horror it wasn't about junk email or an out of control food product, it was about some bloody knights or something like that.
I'm going to appeal.
Time to file a lawsuit then. (Score:2)
Lameness filter encountered.
Your comment violated the "postercomment" compression filter. Try less whitespace and/or less repetition. Comment aborted.
Oh (Score:5, Funny)
Settlement suggestion (Score:5, Funny)
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About that Icon... (Score:4, Insightful)
And yet Slashdot still has a spam (note lowercase 's') icon which looks like a piggy with a brick of presumably Spam as part of its body [slashdot.org], where formerly the icon was indeed a can of Spam.
Well played Slasdot!
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Also, what do a lot of spam-blockers call good e-mail? Ham. So they're implying that spam is like ham, except that it's bad and you don't want it.
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This fight is like a battle between McDonald's Brothers Hardware (probably locally called McDonald's) and McDonald's the fast food chain. Can two companies have similar product names if they don't have overlapping markets? Usually, the answer is yes.....barring certain circumstances. (I'm pretty sure McDonald's Brothers Hardware couldn't sell burgers in the in-store deli.)
The fight about an image of the can would be pure trademark infringment.
Layne
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And yet Slashdot still has a spam (note lowercase 's') icon which looks like a piggy with a brick of presumably Spam as part of its body, where formerly the icon was indeed a can of Spam.
Yeah, it's called a "pun". That doesn't mean people actually confuse the various meaning of words as being the same (otherwise you must feel really awkward when someone offers you a weiner).
The old icon did use the Spam(tm) trademark, though, which
Well, that's just sad. (Score:2, Insightful)
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You're thinking of 'dyspepsia' (Score:2, Informative)
The history of Pepsi was that it was introduced as a curative for dyspepsia, so the makers of Pepsi probably wouldn't mind a little publicity on their product's history.
On a related note - Dr. Pepper was created for the same purpose, using prune juice in their recipe.
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Explanatory link [wikipedia.org], for you young'uns.
Everyone sing! (Score:2)
I like toast and jam.
I like those good and simple things,
and that's why I like SPAM!
Food? (Score:4, Insightful)
A delicacy (Score:5, Interesting)
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Find the vilest, most barf-provoking thing you can think of and it's a delicacy somewhere. Snails, certain funguses, raw fish, spam, all sorts of disgusting stuff is considered not only "food" but "delicacy".
Speaking of disgusting things people put in their mouths (don't go there now Sally) why do they call McDonald's and Burger King "fast food?" It's never fast and you can hardly call it "food".
-mcgrew
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What I've read is that Spam is currently popular where two things intersect:
1. A history of pork consumption among the resident people (which is true for the Pacific isles) and
2. American military presence from the 1930s(?) through the 1970s(?).
I can't remember the date ranges, but this is true for Hawaii, the Philippines, etc. -- it's tied to the US Mili
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Oh I agree it was probably impressive as hell. Not to mention spam's amazing ability to taste almost, but not entirely, unlike meat.
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Believe it or not, SPAM really isn't all that bad when done properly. Slice it thin and fry it with onions for a yummy sandwich. Seriously, although it looks disgusting, it's can be pretty good. People don't keep buying it because it's awful.
Where did it come from? (Score:5, Interesting)
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That's the most likely origin.
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Spam iconic to the Brits? WTF? Maybe to Monty Python, but not the Brits...
Spam is American and is associated with the American C-Ration. I don't have the reference handy, but WWII proved to be a blessing for Spam (and Coca-Cola and Tootsie Rolls) and became entrenched in the local diets possibly due to no other food being available at the time. I can only think of sentimental value as why it remains popular.
Personally, I like Fried Spam sandwiches but I th
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Actually it is. It doesn't have positive associations but it's definitely iconic. Why do you think Python used it in the first place?
Re:Where did it come from? - Definative mule (Score:2, Informative)
That would make sense, but it is wrong. It all started back in the days when we chiseled our bits into stone and sent them by mule train from village to village...
It was the MP skit, not the cultural feelings about SPAM that caused it. Later references were made back to the skit comparison, eventually it was one of those things that people were supposed to just *know* if they were cool.
See: http://www.templetons.com/brad/spamterm.html [templetons.com]
Re:Where did it come from? (Score:5, Informative)
Grace Hopper was not the origin of the term "bug" to refer to a defect in a mechanical device. Both "bug" and "debug" were in use before then. Thomas Edison, for example, referred to bugs in his inventions. Wikipedia's article on software bugs [wikipedia.org] is a good place to start learning more.
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It was the older online geek culture which labeled unwanted email spam. Based off the popularity of Monty Python with that group, The name choice was most likely a reference to the sketch.
NOW.... Where did the idea for the Sketch come from?
Considering the influence and ability of classic Brit TV (Science Fiction and Comedy being the 2 biggest contributors) to bridge the pond... I honestly would not be surprised if most people outside of the UK know
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However the modern use of spam is derived from the sketch - the repetition of 'spam' mirroring directly my experience of reading my inbox some mornings
the other Coke (Score:3, Interesting)
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Sorry to burst your bubble.
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One could say, however, that there is no connection beween Coke (tm) and industrial coke; does calling industrial coke "coke" dilute the Coke trademark?
This isn't a great parallel, since coke was around before Coke (tm) and doesn't have the negative connotations of spam, but trademarks are held to be specific to a type of product.
What is important from Hormel's perspective, I think, is that they maintain positive brand image -- and it's kind
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Actually, jazz is like the New Coke (Score:2)
Sure and that's what Apple said about Apple too (Score:4, Funny)
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Now that's funny.
Sorry for Hormel (Score:4, Insightful)
They had some product out there with a bizzare name. Then the Monty Python skit comes along and satirizes it. That's not so bad really.
But that leads to other people using the name for a different meaning, a meaning garnered from the Monty Python skit rather than the original product. Then the new meaning drowns out their original poduct and takes their name away. Now that hurts.
They didn't cause any of this, and for the most part it was not an intentional attack on them either. They really did not have much recourse at each step because the satire and redefinition were legitimate legal uses. It's all just a sad twist of fate.
Aw well. They can always do what all the SPAMmers do: rename their product and sell it to someone else who does not know any better.
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Isn't SPAM already an imitation to begin with?
Re:Sure and that's what Apple said about Apple too (Score:4, Informative)
Apple did not win the latest trademark dispute becasue of size or name recognition; they had a clause in their license agreement taht was interpreted to allow them to move into music related computer products. They later reached an agreement with Apple Records over the ownership of the Apple trademark, which makes sense since Apple Computer is a much bigger dog and can better protect the Apple name. In any case; it was done via agreemnets between teh two companies, not a court awarding Apple rights to the trademark.
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Re:Sure and that's what Apple said about Apple too (Score:4, Informative)
That's hype. In the arena of food products, the SPAM mark will still be valid and enforceable.
To quote The Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School:
-- http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/metaschool/fisher/domain/tm.htm#7 [harvard.edu], emphasis mineThe first boldfaced bit covers your end-of-the-world hyperbole case. The second boldfaced bit is the actual case: The same trade name applied to distinct and unrelated products will probably not be infringement, which is borne out in the specific lawsut TFA was about.
ObDisclaimer: IANAL, but I bet the clever chaps at Harvard Law School are.
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If Hormel loses, we will no longer know if we are getting the genuine SPAM, or an imitator, when we go the supermarket.
No, they won't. Trade marks only apply to certain fields. They weren't discussing the use of the term with relation to processed meat products.
To quote the article:-
"The case is limited to the e-mail usage of the word spam, which will not detract from the fame associated with Hormel's meat products trademark
"Insightful", my arse.
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It's hard to say that Jobs "won" the dispute. Apple Inc. now owns all trademarks related to "Apple" and licenses specific ones back to Apple Corps but it was a settlement, not a legal decision. Each side took care of their own legal costs and I think it's safe to assume that
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Mod the parent up!
This is indeed a victory for Hormel. Until now, Hormel had to vigorously defend their trademark, or they would lose it.
Now, Hormel has a judge saying that the trademark couldn't be confused when applied to e-mail, and therefore Hormel is relieved of the obligation and expense to defend their trademark with regard to e-mails.
And, if any of you have a memory at all, you'll remember ju
Implied insults (Score:2)
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Where Does You Want To Go Today? (Score:2)
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No, an antivirus company already took that one.
Nothing to do with email or lawsuits, but... (Score:2)
They said I'd grow up like Bruce Jenner
He was a winner that never knew defeat
And when he got hungry
When he got hungry
He cracked open that special treat
Spam
-Save Ferris
Sucks for Hormel... (Score:2)
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Clearly you've never eaten SPAM.
Spam does have one virtue (Score:2)
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HEY! As one of a bunch of geeks I resent that!
Too bad they don't have a sense of humor. (Score:2)
I remember watching some show on Food network ("Good Eats"? I think.) and they covered a Spam cook off. Some of the recipes seemed actually decent, but mostly tongue-in-cheek acknowledgments that spam is not exactly the best tasting thing in the world. But the funniest thing about is that they interviewed some Hormel exec and the guy had NO SENSE OF HUMOR WHATSOEVER, and was almost visibly agitated at the suggestio
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I knew SPAM=email before I knew SPAM='food' (Score:2)
Actually, coming from Ukraine, I was quite amused to see SPAM on the shelves at the stores. Of course, I kind of knew the origin of the term, but somehow I thought that SPAM-the-product was long extinct. Actually, the only reason I bought a can of SPAM once was just that - that act of "buying spam". I really felt amazed that a popular product could be "named after junk email" =)
The next thing that I'd b
more bad news for Hormel (Score:2)
Tagged "patents"? (Score:3, Informative)
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USPTO (Score:2)
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Same as..... (Score:2)
Phishing (Score:2)
You haven't lived (Score:2)
This decision is a correct one (Score:2)
This decision is a correct one. Trademark law traditionally has, with few exceptions, protected a name only within a specific market context. Now "Spam" is a name in a new context Hormel apparently had not registered the name in (or conducted any business in). Their lawyer(s) need(s) to go back to school.
That's a switch (Score:2)
They are probably forced into this by the trademark laws which say
Trademark Categories (Score:2)
Somehow, I doubt Hormel has a trademark on Spam for the computer software category.
Phish (Score:2)
hormel wins (Score:2)
to protect the SPAM trademark for the meat they had to at least pretend to do something about companies calling it spam.
now it has been ruled that the word spam referring to email is not infringing and frees them of any need to do so.
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It also indicated that they accept and have no problem with the meaning that the word 'spam' has taken in recent years, and with it's use as the slang term (in lowercase). Their issue comes from the use of the word "Spam" (capitilized) in trademarks since it was a word a
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Damn, Grandpa, and the kids say I'm to old to post at slashdot! Weren't they going to legalize potted meat? And cracked corn? Speaking of which, where did I put that extra prostitute, I know I had a spare around here somewhere. Shit, I bet I left her at the office. Hope the boss doesn't find her, he'll spill ketchup or something all over her and she's the cleanest one I've got,
What were we talking about again? Oh, spam. What do you call spam with o
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They have to defend their trademark or risk losing it entirely.
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q-tips, band-aids, kleenex, nilla wafers, coke (I grew up drinking many flavors of "coke", one of which was Coke) etc.
Layne