• @grue
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      289 months ago

      No, that’s a bullshit excuse. A grocery store and a union are entirely different categories and a trademark for one doesn’t apply to the other.

      “Oops, I accidentally went to the union to buy milk,” said nobody ever.

      • @linearchaos
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        -49 months ago

        Sorry, Still gotta defend it. doesn’t matter if it’s an ice cream stand. almost all the stuff on their page is fine, but using that font is a no no.

      • Ech
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        -119 months ago

        Eh, there’s enough overlap in the two orgs that I could see an argument of statements of the union trying to look like official tj releases. Overall, I would agree that a union shouldn’t be allowed to use a company’s logo.

        That said, their logo here looks distinctly different. Basically the only similarity is the name itself, which would be absurd to bar a union of that very company from using. I hope the courts keep throwing out these appeals because it’s clearly bullshit.

          • Ech
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            -29 months ago

            How am I “antilabor”? I literally said the lawsuit/appeal is bullshit.

    • @stoly
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      229 months ago

      You might be surprised to know that basically all unions do this sort of thing. It’s not an issue or it would have been blocked decades and decades ago. This is just TJ’s being evil for no particular reason. Please don’t bootlick for the corporations, your identity as a separate person is more valuable.

      • @linearchaos
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        19 months ago

        At the risk if angering the union brigade I’ve already pissed off, that’s not how trademark law works, and all your anger at the man doesn’t change that.

        The intent of the trademark was that no one could pass their wares off as yours. But over the years, the legal standings have changed it into something else. If someone uses something close to your trademark, and you let them, someone else can come along and use it as well. When you take the second use to court, they’ll cite that you didn’t protect it from the first use, and trademarks are lost that way.

        They can totally use the name, they can kinda form it in the way that the company does it. But when they start matching the font and shape of the trademarked logos, shit gets messy. There’s a fine line between vaguely recognizable and protected which comes down to them fighting off trademark trolls. The non-fonted stuff they can’t do shit about, but when they pretty much stole the font with the funky serifs and wrapped it on those bags, it’s a bigger deal.

        That said, they likely should have just licensed it to the union for very specific uses and called it a day. They’re burning through more bad PR and legal fees than is anywhere near necessary.