
Court Tells Disney to Pull Go.com Logo 123
dkh2 writes "Today on ZDNet: A U.S. District Court has denied a request by Disney, InfoSeek and others to stay a preliminary injunction against their familiar green and yellow logo. The injunction orders Disney to remove the logo immediately from all broadcast and internet media and gives them 60 days to remove it from other more solid forms." And Disney/Infoseek has started to comply. You can see the change at Go.com right now.
Now there's a thought... (Score:1)
They /are/ way too similar. (Score:1)
goto.com should be happy. (Score:1)
And to think.... (Score:1)
The system is a crack whore
Re:Now there's a thought... (Score:2)
goto.com has a green circular logo on a yellow background.
go.com had a green circular logo on a yellow background.
www.goto.com has an portal page with links to catagories like auctions, real estate and small business.
www.go.com has an portal page with links to catagories like auctions, real estate and small business.
Obviously these two companies are in the same line of business, and the two logos are similar, so this to me looks like a reasonable trademark case.
Low-Go (Score:1)
Why? (Score:2)
I agree that the logos are similar, but they're certainly differnt enough that anyone with an IQ higher than an old pair of socks should be able to tell the difference.
The GoTo.com logo is essentially "GoTo.COM" in white on a green circle background. The Go Network logo is "Go" superimposed on a traffic light.
Sooner or later there will be no acceptable logos left.. the courts will rule that Westinghouse's "W" logo is too close to the McDonald's "M" logo. After all, it may confuse someone if one is just an upside-down version of the other.
- Drew
Wow, I fell for it. (Score:3)
~afniv
"Man könnte froh sein, wenn die Luft so rein wäre wie das Bier"
What's the deal? (Score:1)
Who's pushing the change?
Neither should own it (Score:2)
Re:What's the deal? (Score:1)
Go Logo Contest (Score:1)
Anyways, I think Go network should have a contest to get a new logo, because frankly, the new one on Go's website sucks. The logo should indicate "going" somehow, like the greenlight did. But this time try and stay away from logos similar to other companies.
I'm surprised Lucent hasn't sued every company out there with cirular logos. Or Debian suing Sega over the Dreamcast logo. This whole lawsuit craze is ruining this country.
It looks better without it. (Score:1)
Honest Query, not flame: Who cares? (Score:1)
But does it actually matter?
Failure is not an option.
Taste of Their Own Medicine (Score:1)
Not Updated Everywhere (Score:2)
They've Already Changed (Score:2)
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IanO
McDonalds already files lawsuits over names (Score:1)
My friend told me that in Scotland there is a ban on McDonalds for fear that they would file lawsuits against any businesses with family names in them that start with Mc. I don't believe that. That is a little too rediculous.
go.com /.'d?!?!?!?! (Score:1)
Odd vision. (Score:3)
Mickey Mouse, shorts around his ankles, being spanked over Janet Reno's knee.
Didn't Go.com's 'Executive-Vice-Weenie' type get busted for interstate traffiking in kiddie porn?
Re:Neither should own it (Score:1)
Re:They've Already Changed (Score:1)
That explains it. (Score:2)
The only thing that bothers me is I though go.com was going after goto.com for the similarity. I didn't realize it was the other way around. Or did the courts just turn around and bite the guys who brought the suit up in the first place?
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Not Updated Everywhere (Score:1)
Let's all play Spot the Violations of Court Order!
Instead of arguing... (Score:3)
I'll start off the lists...
Similarities:
Differences:
Re:Why? (Score:1)
And to answer the question of "Why?", I think it all goes back to Sunday's User Friendly [http].
And people are always asking my why stupid people shouldn't be allowed to breed....What was that song about how they should all have to wear a sign?
Ha ha! (Score:1)
Not to let my personal feelings into this but... (Score:2)
(Yea, it's just as easy to bash the mouse as it is to bash the bill but it makes me feel better after a long day at work)
Pete
Slow getting the news out this week? (Score:1)
What's the problem, too much free beer [gnu.org] at Comdex?
Bravery, Kindness, Clarity, Honesty, Compassion, Generosity
A note from the inside... and a question (Score:1)
I work for one of Go.com's major competitors and am relieved to finally see this happen. We recently went through a rebranding ourselves and used the same agency [USWEB/CKS]. I pointed out the similarity to one of their senior designers and a creative director [both were peripherally involved in the go.com branding] and their jaws hit the floor.
Strangely, branding is supposed to involve research into similar logos. Given the level of competency we found on the agency's end, [not a whole lot] I find this not at all suprising.
Which leads me to my question:
Are there any design agencies who actually 'get' the internet?
I have worked with many of the biggest agencies [meta, sapient, CKS, Luxon-Carra, etc] and have yet to actually encounter one who knew [technically] what they are doing.
Re:Not Updated Everywhere (Score:1)
Chris
Re:goto.com should NOT be happy. (Score:1)
If people see the go.com logo more than the goto.com, they associate the symbol and design with them, not with goto.com. They're doing the right thing by fighting for it.
Re:Instead of arguing... (Score:2)
Pete
Weird. (Score:2)
Yeah, sure, maybe they came up with it independently, and that sure would suck - but they are directly competing, younger, and someone who is not looking at them side-by-side is very likely to be confused.
Headline should have read: (Score:2)
Re:goto.com should be happy. (Score:1)
Sounds like... (Score:2)
copyright doesn't discriminate against bad design (Score:1)
cheers,
dandre
Because... (Score:5)
People rarely consciously 'see' advertising anymore (what ad banners have you seen during your current surfing session? Name them all, the companies and products they're pitching, please. See?) - it's all taken in as vague patterns, and used to recognise or remember a certain item later when it's seen again. Guaranteed, if you walked past 30 billboards in a day, each with one or the other of those logos in the corner, at the end of the day, you would *not* be able to tell how many of each there were - all you would remember would be a square border, green circle, and something about 'GO' in it... and the associations you make with the logo and the content of the boards may not be something that GoTo.com wants you to make.
That's what all this is about. Consider - it wouldn't be any different from the GoTo/Disney situation if I came up with a logo that had a very realistic-looking burger bun surrounding the words 'Burger Town' in the Burger King colors and font. I'd get my ass sued off, and rightfully so.
Re:Neither should own it (Score:1)
Re:They've Already Changed (Score:1)
Re:A note from the inside... and a question (Score:1)
> 'get' the internet?
Allow me to advertise a friend of mine: Manfred Spiller [spillini.com].
He's a German screen designer who actually knows what he's doing. He got the German art directors' award for his work and has done some of the more prominent web sites in Germany.
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Sue this, appeal that... (Score:1)
Every where I turn, someone is either suing or appealing (and I don't mean they're cute ).
I just don't care anymore.
BD
I'm surprised (Score:1)
This is what happens when a company has too much faith a justice system that often yields to money and power, but not every time...
Re:Go Logo Contest (Score:1)
I think they could have gotten away with the green traffic light idea if they had just made it part of a 3-way traffic. Having it just be better drawn than the GoTo logo (Which really just looks like a green spot on a yellow square, rather than GO's single light green traffic light with 3D shadowing) wasn't enough differentiation.
Re:go.com /.'d?!?!?!?! (Score:1)
Re:Why? (Score:1)
The GoTo logo is essentially a more stylized version of the Go logo, aside from the change in words. The fact that they are in exactly the same business, using names that are nearly identical, makes a lot of difference. The word "Albatross" in a traffic light would probably have been fine. "Allez" might not have been, qui sait?
Re:goto.com should be happy.(ot) (Score:1)
Oh, Please... (Score:2)
Saying that there will be "no acceptable logos left" is like saying there will be no acceptable artwork after this piece is done, no acceptable music after this one, or on a less artistic plane no more inventions after this one. Please, any creative commercial artist worth his weight will always be able to come up with a new logo design that hasn't been protected yet. Please.
Re:Go Logo Contest (Score:1)
Disney Arrogance, and Some Precedent (Score:2)
The reality is that Disney figured, heh, we're Disney and they're just some little company using Inktomi's database to sell a few banners. Screw 'em.
That they refused to budge--at all--probably created a more vicious response from the judge than they might have already gotten.
Incidentally, choosing logos and naming companies isn't entirely that simple. Back when I was still convention hopping(sigh why am I not at Comdex right now?) Infospace, the software company, was quite royally peeved at Infospace, everybody's favorite personal and business info search engine.
Yours Truly,
Dan Kaminsky
DoxPara Research
http://www.doxpara.com
Re:Wow, I fell for it. (Score:1)
Let's just say the damn fool is not the person I'm replying to.
I agree (Score:1)
I never even knew there was a difference between goto.com and go.com
I thought they were the same company, just with multiple URLs.
Oh well, live and learn.
iain
Re:They /are/ way too similar. (Score:1)
Re:Why? (Score:1)
Since Westinghouse is not even close to a McD's competitor, there is no risk. The issue here is that Go and GoTo are direct competitors.
Re:McDonalds already files lawsuits over names (Score:1)
Re:Neither should own it (Score:2)
Disney was quite worse though... Their's endless variations of the word go... but they had to choose a traffic light??? Sorry if i sounded like Steve Jobs there, but honestly... Let's see, an arrow for starters. A zooming word go. I'm sure i could figure out 50 more in the next hour if i wanted to.
Re:Weird. (Score:2)
Re:Because... (Score:1)
Umm, those damned eye magnet X10 Camera banner ads. And the banner ad(s) at the top of the
Re:Neither should own it (Score:1)
(two go in, one comes out
Re:Irony (Score:1)
Ozwald
McDowell's (Score:1)
Re:Go Logo Contest (Score:1)
Re:They've Already Changed (Score:1)
Let me get this straight... (Score:1)
McDonalds in Scotland (Score:2)
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Re:McDowell's (Score:2)
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Re:McDonalds already files lawsuits over names (Score:1)
Surely they're asking for a law-suit?
the ones that don't blink (Score:1)
>surfing session?
Only the ones that don't blink
Re:Neither should own it (Score:1)
Re:goto.com should be happy. (Score:2)
Re:Now there's a thought... (Score:1)
Actually, I think this is one of the less stupid trademark cases.
I wholeheartedly agree. They both came on the scene at the same time, and I remember it took me months to get the two of them separate in my mind. For the longest time I was thinking "why is ABC advertising a search engine in all their shows?"
-Lx?
Been playing quqke3? (Score:1)
Re:McDonalds in Scotland: Urban Myth? (Score:1)
Re:Now there's a thought... (Score:1)
Re:Odd [But Wrong] vision. (Score:1)
Re:Irony (Score:1)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
>I agree that the logos are similar, but they're certainly differnt enough that anyone with an IQ higher than an old pair of socks should be able to tell the difference. The GoTo.com logo is essentially "GoTo.COM" in white on a green circle background. The Go Network logo is "Go" superimposed on a traffic light. Sooner or later there will be no acceptable logos left.. the courts will rule that Westinghouse's "W" logo is too close to the McDonald's "M" logo. After all, it may confuse someone if one is just an upside-down version of the other.
It's not whether you can tell the difference, it's whether the average consumer might be confused. There's also a question of whether they're in the same "trade" (hence the term "trademark"). There would be no confusion between McDonald's and Westinghouse because they are in different industries; but if Westinghouse decided to start selling, say, the home-burger-and-shake-machine with a big "W" on the side, you might get an objection.
GOTO.com had been using their logo for over a year when Disney came up with the GO.com logo. They were both in the same business (net portals) and were using similar names (GO/GOTO) and were playing off the same motif (green traffic light). I think this was a clear failure of Disney's lawyers to properly research the market.
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Lake Effect [wwa.com], a weblog
Re:Neither should own it (Score:2)
How can goto claim to own a traffic signal design? If someone used a similar label for a site called stop.com, would they sue over that? Craziness.
Once again showing the pure ignorance that passes for "insightful" on slashdot! Trademarking of common items has always been acceptable: Apple Computer, Eagle Foods, Lighthouse Films. But if the "common item" in question is part of the industry the company is in, getting exclusive use is more difficult. (For instance, many landscaping firms will probably use an emblem of a tree in their logo.) In this case, the emblem has metaphoric value in regards to the purpose of the company, but certainly isn't directly related. The prior usage is by Goto.com, and it was clear from the beginning that Disney was trying to outlawyer them, to make up for their woefully inadequate research. (Any IP lawyer with an ounce of sense would have advised them to trash GO.com on seeing the other logo.)
I think a general rule of thumb should be: Don't get your Intellectual Property legal advice from anybody on Slashdot. Some days, it's appalling.
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Lake Effect [wwa.com], a weblog
It's not JUST the logo (Score:1)
I mean, not only does the (defunct) go.com logo look almost the same as goto.com, the name is almost the same.
Did they really expect to not get sued?
Trademark Confusion law (Score:3)
It's not mentioned here, but there's a new law (the Trademark Anti Dilution Act of 1999 [loc.gov]) addressing this issue, that gives more protection to so-called "famous marks". This has been cited before in regards to domain names, which seems to be one of its main thrusts.
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Lake Effect [wwa.com], a weblog
Whatever (Score:1)
Or would you just roll over and let them bury you?
www.STOP.com (Score:1)
You could also tradmark other things like:
Stopsign
Highway exit sign
Yellow light.
Re:Taste of Their Own Medicine (Score:1)
Re:They /are/ way too similar. (Score:1)
Re:McDonalds already files lawsuits over names (Score:1)
If McClean sold fast food, then yeah, there may be a problem. The McDonald name (and prefixing products with 'Mc') are only valid relating to fast food items. I could open a McDonalds Computer Store if I wanted and McDonalds (the fast food chain) couldn't do anything about it. Anyway, like most of us, IANAL.
(I realize the parent post was probably more tongue-in-cheek than serious, but it seemed a good place to make this point.)
Re:McDonalds in Scotland: Urban Myth? (Score:3)
news storywith links to others.
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Re:Now there's a thought... (Score:1)
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Re:McDonalds already files lawsuits over names (Score:1)
...and "Mc" is definitely not trademarkable under Scottish law, when about 5% of the population have it in their name. It is a contraction of the Gaelic "Mac" meaning son; the correct form for unmarried females is "Nic" but it is never used in English. The usage is much like the Icelandic "-sson" and "-djottir" suffixes, but the name is a clan one rather than the father's forename.
Fast food joints are never called "restaurant" outside North America, but subject to minor factual errors the story about the village takeaway owner is genuine.
Scotland has many quaint feudal laws which still operate, and a clan cheiftan really would have a chance of having the name pulled from every golden arched burger joint in the country. To set it in context, legal recognition of clans in Scotland dates back to when you guys were a few British, French and Spanish colonies
disney buys goto.com (Score:1)
Why not? They could. the ultimate in an out-of-court settlement: stock swap! Not that I'm a fan of Disney (evil megaconglomerate mass-culture factory), but it seems like the logo is worth billions to them, they might as well buy out goto.com. And while they're at it they should also buy gogo.com gotohell.com and other valuable family-oriented portal domain names and sites... ;)
Why goto.com had to sue, and sue now (Score:1)
Disney came up with the logo that goto.com should have perhaps, but that's a separate issue that has no real bearing on the suit as Disney didn't do it first.
People are stupid, they will confuse the two (Score:1)
Re:Irony (Score:1)
Re:McDonalds already files lawsuits over names (Score:1)
Re:Go Logo Contest (Score:1)
Both of those logos are (very slightly) reminiscent of those Mr. Poison stickers we used to get in elementary school, remember those? =)
GO (call 911!!)
GOTO (the fridge and drink lots of milk!!)
Re:They've Already Changed (Score:1)
Re:Instead of arguing... (Score:1)
I wouldn't even give you that. Green-circle-on-yellow-background says 'traffic light' to me. With embossed shadows or not.
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Later. Much later. (Note number names herein correspond to the American system, but I've also provided "e" notation.)
Let's assume all logos can be defined by eight colors (say red, yellow, green, blue, white, black, purple, and brown) as "blocks" on a 10x10 grid.
Then lets's assume that trademarking any one logo prohibits anyone from using the one septillion (10e24, or 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000) logos most similar to that one.
That means there are then 2.037035976 x 10e66 trademarkable logos in the world, while there have been fewer than 4 x 10e9 people, in all of history.
Okay, let's modify this. Let's say that all trademarkable logos can be defined in two colors (black or white) on a 10x10 grid, and that trademarking any one bars the one sextillion (10e21) closest logos from being used. That still leaves 1.2676506 x 10e9 logos, or one for every four people alive today.
Now, that means with an artifically and tightly constricted subset of logos, there are still more logos around than would be needed, and most would be so obscure nobody would ever find out about the accidental duplication of most of them.
So, we don't need to worry about running out of logos. The only risk is running out of "meaningful" logos, but not protecting them eliminates the utility of having a "meaningful" logo in the first place.
Re:Instead of arguing... (Score:1)
The suit was filed the day go.com went live.