Quote:
Originally Posted by epitome
You do not need a law degree to spot such blatant trademark infringement.
Are you using their mark to educate consumers on your offering vs theirs? No.
Is it a parody? No.
Could a consumer reasonably believe that Harvard endorses your product? Yes.
Did they grant you the right to use their mark in advertising? No.
Do you have a disclaimer in your advertising? No.
Are you using their mark to increase the desirability of your product? Yes.
Any first year associate could argue that you're diluting their mark.
Also, they specifically have a registration covering "web site management, development, and hosting services."
I bet you file DMCA's and lawsuits when your IP is infringed upon, though.
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where's your law degree? i am still waiting for a scan.
congratulations - you answered a bunch of rhetorical questions to yourself on what you believe to be important and made a screencap. let me be the first to tell you how smart you are because you are looking for some sort of validation. you get 2 gold stars, but you still fail.
i really don't even know why lawyers take 3 years to go to law school and take the bar, rack up al that trial experience, etc....when everyone at home can just google like you and play pretend lawyer like an expert.
let me guess, you're also a doctor and you can diagnose illnesses through the internet?