Tag Archive for: Trying

California Man Gets Sued After Trying To Trademark Bully A Theme Park

We’ve seen a great many examples of trademark lawsuits here at Techdirt. In most cases, those lawsuits are levied by individuals and companies that are the trademark bully, but that’s not always the case. We also see plenty of suits that are raised in defense of such bullying, in which the entity suing asks the court to simply affirm that its use is not infringing. Trademark bullies, of course, don’t like when that sort of thing happens.

Meet Scott D’Avanzo of California. Scott did a pretty cool thing and created a haunted house attraction in his garage, naming it the “Mystic Motel.” Then he came across the plans of the Silver Dollar City theme park near Branson for its new “Mystic River Falls” water rafting ride. At that point, he did the very un-cool thing of contacting Mystic River over the trademark he had on his haunted house and demanding to speak about the name of the new ride.

Scott D’Avanzo said he sent Silver Dollar City a letter earlier this year asking the theme park to contact him about the name, which he claims is similar to the “Mystic Motel” name he used for a haunted house attraction he started out of his garage.

“You have to police your trademarks,” D’Avanzo said. “That’s all we were doing is protecting what was ours.”

D’Avanzo said he has sent many letters to other businesses that are similar to the one he sent Silver Dollar City. He said his letters are usually followed by a phone call where the two parties can work out some parameters for use of the name.

Silver Dollar City, however, didn’t bend the knee to D’Avanzo. Instead, the theme park filed a lawsuit, seeking to have the court declare that the name of its ride at a large-ish theme park doesn’t somehow violate the trademark rights for a garage-based haunted house. The reported arguments Silver Dollar City makes are the ones you would expect; namely, that its use of the word “Mystic” isn’t going to cause confusion among the public for a “family project and neighborhood attraction.” That’s all the theme park wants: the reasonable use of the name of its ride.

But Silver Dollar City doesn’t stop there. The theme park also points out that D’Avanzo didn’t oppose its trademark application, didn’t say a word about it until it came time for a money-grab, and, oh, D’Avanzo destroyed his Mystic Motel setup entirely some time ago.

Upon information and belief, both the “Mystic Motel” “dark house” and the Christmas-themed “Journey to Polar Point” family projects were destroyed or deconstructed at some time. Upon information and belief, the “Mystic Motel” and “Journey to Polar Point” marks were not in continuous use with those projects during certain years. Upon information and belief, the “Mystic Motel” and “Journey to Polar Point” marks were not used at all or in interstate commerce with those projects during certain years. Upon information and belief, the “MYSTIC MOTEL” mark does not appear to be in use at this time. Upon information and belief, Mr. D’Avanzo and his family are not currently living in the Ladera Ranch house and they appear to have no ability to offer the “dark house” attraction under the “MYSTIC MOTEL” mark for Halloween this year.

In fact, the filing goes so far as to claim that D’Avanzo’s trademark application itself may have been built on lies, where he claims to be using the “Mystic Motel” mark in interstate commerce, but never did. On top of that, D’Avanzo created a separate company, Adrenaline Attractions, to which he assigned the trademark. Adrenaline Attractions doesn’t provide amusement attractions, but instead consults with parks to design rides, which isn’t the market designation for which D’Avanzo has his trademark. Also, Adrenaline Attractions appears to have exactly one customer. Again, this is not a story about confusion in commerce, but about a money-grab.

This, somehow, rates with D’Avanzo as bullying.

“That’s what they are is a big bully,” D’Avanzo said of Silver Dollar City.  “I’m not a stranger to the court,” D’Avanzo said. “And if I have to fight, I will.”

Any reasonable assessment of the situation would result in Silver Dollar City’s request for declaratory judgement to be granted. I’d only like to add that it takes chops to bully a company over a trademark, have that company ask the court to defend it from the bullying, and then call the company the trademark bully.

Maybe D’Avanzo can add an IP wing to his haunted house, except he doesn’t appear to actually have one any longer.

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Hackers are actively trying to steal passwords from two widely used VPNs

Hackers are actively trying to steal passwords from two widely used VPNs

(credit: xxdigipxx)

Hackers are actively unleashing attacks that attempt to steal encryption keys, passwords, and other sensitive data from servers that have failed to apply critical fixes for two widely used virtual private network (VPN) products, researchers said.

The vulnerabilities can be exploited by sending unpatched servers Web requests that contain a special sequence of characters, researchers at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas said earlier this month. The pre-authorization file-reading vulnerabilities resided in the Fortigate SSL VPN, installed on about 480,000 servers, and the competing Pulse Secure SSL VPN, installed on about 50,000 machines, researchers from Devcore Security Consulting reported.

The Devcore researchers discovered other critical vulnerabilities in both products. These make it possible for attackers to, among other things, remotely execute malicious code and change passwords. Patches for the Fortigate VPN became available in May and in April for Pulse Secure. But installing the patches can often cause service disruptions that prevent businesses from carrying out essential tasks.

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Biz & IT – Ars Technica

Fans, Indie Soccer Clubs Slam Liverpool FC For Trying To Trademark ‘Liverpool’

Covering trademark nonsense, our posts tend to intersect regularly with the world of sports. It’s relatively common at this point to witness teams and even entire leagues pulling anti-fan trademark stunts, from athletes trademarking their own nicknames no matter the fallout, to leagues considering messing with the trademark applications of video game companies, up to and including iconic baseball teams managing to trademark the derisive nickname given to them by other teams. It’s all very, very stupid.

Across the pond, however, teams in the Premier League have somehow managed to get trademarks on their home-city’s names. Chelsea FC, for instance, has a trademark for “Chelsea” related specifically to football services and merch. This sort of thing is almost never allowed here in the States, but it’s become enough of a thing that Liverpool FC is attempting the same move for “Liverpool” and it’s pissing off a whole bunch of people.

As was the case with Chelsea FC, Liverpool FC insists its mark will be very narrow.

The Reds stress their application is “only in the context of football products and services”, and intended to protect both the club and the supporters “from those benefiting from inauthentic products”.

There are a couple of problems with this. For starters, the general public has apparently become educated enough on the practices of trademark abuse to want to push back on the application themselves. Given how ignorant the general public has long been on how broad trademarks can be abused, this is rather encouraging to see.

A petition has been launched on Change.org that, at the time of writing, had already gathered more than 850 signatures in the space of a few hours.

It said: “This petition is to keep [the word Liverpool] for all people of Merseyside to use without a solicitor’s letter dropping through your door. Do the right thing. Let’s stop this.”

Twitter user Azul wrote: “The club only need see how unpopular this is with its own fans to realise their greed is going too far. Not everyone has the budget for official merchandise, and there’s many making a living from this. Turn it in lads.”

Negative feedback from the public goes on from there, including from local ward Councillors. But you have to also wonder just what the granting of such a trademark would do to City of Liverpool FC, an independent club that plays in the Northern Premier League.

City of Liverpool FC, who play in the Northern Premier League, called the move “outrageous” on Twitter. A spokesman for the club told the ECHO : “Our club is one of many that will be affected by this trademark application made by Liverpool FC.  We as an ambitious and independent football club feel that we are entitled to use the name of our city in our name. We understand that LFC may not have intended to threaten the future of our club, but that is an effect of this application, but even just on a moral basis, we don’t think any private business should be able to own the word ‘Liverpool’ – it simply does not belong to them.”

Beyond any moral concerns, this is exactly why many trademark systems put such a high bar on attempts to trademark geographic terms. That term is typically more widely used than any kind of creatively inspired name or term, as is the case here. For a given industry, never mind something as popular as football in the UK, there is likely more than one player in a geographic area. Allowing any one of them to gobble up the rights to a geographic term for that entire industry, even an industry as narrow as football, is insane.

Fellow Twitter user John Furlong called for a campaign against the “ridiculous idea”, adding: “The name of the city does not belong to any one individual or group.”

Not so in the case of Chelsea, as we’ve said. But that’s a problem, not a precedent worth repeating.

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America is still trying to win the last cyber war | TheHill – The Hill

America is still trying to win the last cyber war | TheHill  The Hill

China and other actors often know our supply chains better than we do.

“cyber warfare news” – read more