Dropping an h is not the best disguise, even Vampires in bad movies manage better than that.
Coming soon, Gordie Brön, lead designer for Duke Nukem Forever.
Mine's the one with the Millibrand spectral analyser.
Remebering all those pesky pseudonyms
By Andrew
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 13:05 GMT
"Jacqueline Smit"
"Jacqui Smith"
Coincidence? You decide...
MSNLOCK
By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 13:13 GMT
Sounds like a good product.
Wonder if its available in english
David and Goliath
By Ash
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 13:19 GMT
Errr... I seem to remember David winning that one with a stone from a sling... Not quite the metaphor you want.
Anyway, it's not the trademark infringement they care about; it's the MS spokespersons' comment which hits the mark: "We offer similar products ourselves."
Why 'Embrace, Extend, Extinguish' when you can sue into liquidation?
More evidence for the ongoing EU anti-competition investigation, then.
By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 13:20 GMT
>"We encourage products that help parents limit internet use of their children, we offer those products ourselves."
Yes, and then you engage in blatantly anti-competitive lawsuits to shut out the competition, you convicted criminal monopolists. Dunno why the court stood for this cheap barratry, but hopefully the European Commission will take this into account when weighing their decision.
If the Term MSN was in the Dutch dictionary
By Gordon Pryra
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 13:27 GMT
During the trial,
then the defense lawyer was pretty shite tbh
Where google leads....
By Eddie
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 13:32 GMT
Just to forestall the "Feck me, is there no depth to which microsoft will not stoop", google have issued cease and desist letters to a web site that collects neologisms for includeing the verb "to google" - apparently it must be lower case for the verb.
Perhaps then, msnlock would have been okay.
Ridiculous
By Andrew Johnson
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 14:04 GMT
So, it's ok for http://msnicon.com/ to exist ?! because they add to MSN, but not MSNlock.
Aren't people more likely to use MSN if they know that can fit parental control around it!
I'll stick with Yahoo Messenger, at least Microsoft isn't getting involved there ;)
Appeal in a year
By Mycho
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 15:45 GMT
When it is proved that Microsoft's pledge to act against all those other 'infringers' is cobblers.
Re: Ridiculous
By Test Man
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 15:45 GMT
Apart from the fact that there is MSN interoperability that is.
The Dutch version of the Oxford English Dictionary
By Dick
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 16:01 GMT
Huh?
The Dutch version...
By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 16:50 GMT
My thoughts exactly.
The Dutch Version?
By James O'Brien
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 20:54 GMT
*twitch*
/reboot
Counting the days
By Stewart Rice
Posted Wednesday 7th May 2008 21:40 GMT
If Microsoft want MSN removed from the dictionary to prevent other businesses from using it, how long before they insist on the removale of Windows from the same dictionary.
Hummm... the air is a bit stuffy in here. I'm going to open a *REMOVED PENDING LAWSUIT*
@counting the days
By Bob Gulien
Posted Thursday 8th May 2008 06:50 GMT
They tried to get "Windows" as a brandname years ago.
They failed.
@Dutch version: Van Dale is a dictionary in it's own right and not a version of the OED.
Maybe the author wanted to compare it to something similar in English.
PH - 'cause she has both in her library
It's not still called MSN Messenger, though, is it?
By Alan Jenney
Posted Thursday 8th May 2008 11:02 GMT
All this talk of "MSN" relating to instant messaging and defending of Microsoft's branding of their IM client seems to be a bit pointless now.
I'm not surprised that the Dutch firm have renamed the product - haven't Microsoft re-branded Messenger as "Windows Live Messenger" and dropped the association with the letters "MSN" altogether? Just like,
MSN Search = Live Search,
MSN Passport = Windows Live ID,
MSN Hotmail = Windows Live Hotmail.
Only the portal/service provision retains the MSN branding and that's not what the product was locking.
Like the time that they tried to copyright the word "Windows", they've got just as little a chance with "Live".
Famous Search Engine
By Martin Usher
Posted Thursday 8th May 2008 18:06 GMT
The "Feedback" page from the magazine "New Scientist" never uses the G-word for the same reason (they got some nastygram from corporate legal), they always describe it as "a famous search engine".
If this MSN-thing happened to me the (renamed) code would go open-source so fast that it would make certain corporate heads swim.
Its all about branding, so the way to stop branding in its tracks is never to use the brand name or any of the band logos.
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