While many can tell the difference between Sky TV services and Microsoft's SkyDrive
cloud storage, that's not necessarily true for everyone. A British
court certainly thinks there's room for confusion: it has ruled that
SkyDrive infringes BSkyB's trademarks on the Sky name in both the UK and
the European Union. The presiding judge didn't believe that Microsoft's
use of the "sky" prefix was absolutely necessary, and she showed
evidence that at least some of the general public didn't understand
which company made what. Microsoft says it plans to appeal the verdict,
although there's no guarantee that it will have to relabel SkyDrive if
the appeal falls through. Some past trademark lawsuits have led to fines
instead of name changes, and we suspect Microsoft would rather pay out
than lose brand recognition across a whole continent.Labels
- adsense (41)
- Adsense Arabic (8)
- Android (12)
- Apps (124)
- BlackBerry (3)
- EAV (46)
- ESET (47)
- ESET Username password EAV Trial (47)
- Forex (9)
- Games (481)
- iMac (2)
- iPad (12)
- iphone (1)
- iWatch (1)
- LeapPad Ultra tablet (1)
- LG (2)
- Mobile New (67)
- News (652)
- Nexus 7 (1)
- nod32 (79)
- Rémi Gaillard (3)
- Samsung (8)
- Samsung Galaxy (17)
- Sony Xperia Z Ultra (9)
- Sprint Vital (1)
- Trial (27)
- TweetDeck (1)
- Username password (46)
Sunday, June 30, 2013
BSkyB wins trademark case against Microsoft over SkyDrive name
While many can tell the difference between Sky TV services and Microsoft's SkyDrive
cloud storage, that's not necessarily true for everyone. A British
court certainly thinks there's room for confusion: it has ruled that
SkyDrive infringes BSkyB's trademarks on the Sky name in both the UK and
the European Union. The presiding judge didn't believe that Microsoft's
use of the "sky" prefix was absolutely necessary, and she showed
evidence that at least some of the general public didn't understand
which company made what. Microsoft says it plans to appeal the verdict,
although there's no guarantee that it will have to relabel SkyDrive if
the appeal falls through. Some past trademark lawsuits have led to fines
instead of name changes, and we suspect Microsoft would rather pay out
than lose brand recognition across a whole continent.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment