• Ernie Ball
  • MusicMan
  • Sterling by MusicMan
Status
Not open for further replies.

fbecir

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 3, 2005
Messages
2,971
Location
Paris, FRANCE
I just find this :
mlg_headstock.jpg


Here is the site : Michael Lewis Guitars
 

ProtoChicken

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 30, 2009
Messages
689
I've always been curious about this. The 4+2 is protected but I assume the 2+4 isn't as Brian Moore guitars have been using that configuration for at least 15 years?
 

Pablo

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 21, 2006
Messages
431
Location
Galten, Denmark
Call me crazy, but it would take a blind man to confuse that for an EBMM... I absolutely understand wanting to protect intelectual property, but TO ME this seems a tad silly, as there really is nothing even remotely MusicMan-ish about that guitar. But again: when there's a copyright, there's a copyright.

Cheers

Eske
 

koogie2k

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 28, 2002
Messages
5,859
Location
Moyock, NC
Call me crazy, but it would take a blind man to confuse that for an EBMM... I absolutely understand wanting to protect intelectual property, but TO ME this seems a tad silly, as there really is nothing even remotely MusicMan-ish about that guitar. But again: when there's a copyright, there's a copyright.

Cheers

Eske

I see what you are saying. I personally, because I know an Ebmm, would not confuse his. However, we the general public, do not know what that copyright entails. That is a business thing that pops and company have been doing for many years. Something we all do not have privy to. That is where the lawyers and what not get involved. I believe it infringes.. But Wonderdog is the one that would reaaly know for sure. That is why he gets paid the big $$$$.
 

PeteDuBaldo

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 16, 2004
Messages
10,186
Location
Central Connecticut (Manchester) USA
Simply put, the 4+2 and 3+1 headstocks are a trademark belonging to Ernie Ball, in the USA and in various other countries. Any other company marketing a guitar/bass with the 4+2 or 3+1 headstock in the US or those other countries is committing trademark infringement.
 

the24thfret

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 4, 2007
Messages
2,458
EB also copyrighted martinis, from now on every bar has to put olives in them with the eb logo
 

jamminjim

Well-known member
Joined
May 25, 2006
Messages
2,304
Location
Grand Junction, Colorado
I wish you guys would get it right for a change - it's either patented or trademarked - NOT copyright. Pete or others are always stepping in and straightening you out. Go to someplace like wikipedia and read about the differences. Thank you.

neophytes!
 

Jack FFR1846

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 17, 2008
Messages
2,176
Location
Hopkinton, MA
I wish you guys would get it right for a change - it's either patented or trademarked - NOT copyright. Pete or others are always stepping in and straightening you out. Go to someplace like wikipedia and read about the differences. Thank you.

neophytes!

And then there is "Trade Dress"........
 

ProtoChicken

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 30, 2009
Messages
689
I was talking to my dad who is a torts attorney about trademark issues (I think the conversation had to do with Coca Cola), and he explained to me, assuming my dullard lefty brain understood correctly, that if companies don't defend their trademarks when infringement issues occur they risk loosing the ability to claim it as their own.

So if a company keeps letting infringements slide and then one day decides they want to take action, the courts may tell them that too much time has passed and too many other people our doing it for them to now try to claim infringement.

I'm sure there is lots more to it than that and I've probably jumbled some of it, but I think that was the gist of it. Just another thing to consider when people say "but xxxxx is such a big company, why do they care if a small company has infringed".
 
Last edited:

LawDaddy

Well-known member
Joined
May 3, 2009
Messages
764
Location
Auburn, CA
Hey guys, I am an intellectual property lawyer, a registered patent attorney to be exact. I am not associated with EBMM in any way so I will not opine on the issues raised here.

However, I have seen comments from threads like this used in legal proceedings before. I have had to deal with comment threads in patent cases, so I feel compelled to make one small point.

The comments here by EBMM's customers here could be found relevant in a trade mark/trade dress proceeding, and a seemingly harmless bit of speculation by a forum member regarding what a particular poster deemed protectable/not protectable/silly etc. could come back to haunt EBMM at some point, and cost BP lots of $$$ to have his attorneys explain it in court someday.

Accordingly, I would encourage forum members to refrain from random lay speculation on legal matters, and leave the enforcement efforts to EBMM's esteemed counsel.

Hope this helps,

-Tim
 

sixtyfour

Active member
Joined
Apr 23, 2007
Messages
27
Hey guys, I am an intellectual property lawyer, a registered patent attorney to be exact. I am not associated with EBMM in any way so I will not opine on the issues raised here.

However, I have seen comments from threads like this used in legal proceedings before. I have had to deal with comment threads in patent cases, so I feel compelled to make one small point.

The comments here by EBMM's customers here could be found relevant in a trade mark/trade dress proceeding, and a seemingly harmless bit of speculation by a forum member regarding what a particular poster deemed protectable/not protectable/silly etc. could come back to haunt EBMM at some point, and cost BP lots of $$$ to have his attorneys explain it in court someday.

Accordingly, I would encourage forum members to refrain from random lay speculation on legal matters, and leave the enforcement efforts to EBMM's esteemed counsel.

Hope this helps,

-Tim

Good advice, Tim. I was just shooting the breeze and didn't think about that. I deleted my comments.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom