Cont: Musk buys Twitter II

Just for fun, I decided to report the tweet. It was actually quite difficult to select a category that properly included fraud.

Are they still tweets? Xs don't really tweet anything, like little birdies do. The world moves too fast for me.
 
"I like Twitter. Apart from the employees, and the people using it ... oh, and the name and the branding. I should buy it."

-Musk probably
 
"I like Twitter. Apart from the employees, and the people using it ... oh, and the name and the branding. I should buy it."

-Musk probably

How could Musk make it more of a hilarious disaster?

https://tsdr.uspto.gov/#caseNumber=87980831&caseType=SERIAL_NO&searchType=statusSearch
From

https://twitter.com/alexweprin/status/1683568173809844229?s=20
It appears Instagram and FB owner Meta holds the trademark for "X" as it relates to "online social networking services... social networking services in the fields of entertainment, gaming and application development..." https://tsdr.uspto.gov/#caseNumber=87980831&caseType=SERIAL_NO&searchType=statusSearch
 
Lol. Like this is going to help.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-66284304

Twitter has changed its brand and logo from its famous blue bird to "X".

The new white X on a black background has replaced the blue bird on the desktop version of the social network, although is yet to appear on the mobile app.

"Tweets" will also be replaced, according to Twitter's owner Elon Musk, and posts will be called "x's".

"Hey, did you see what so-and-so x'ed?" "Tweet" at least is easy to understand as a verb and has already entered the lexicon. If you say someone "tweeted" something, people understand what that means. If you they "x'ed" something, people won't understand.

Whatever you think about Twitter, it is at least a recognizable brand. Now you have to start that process over. Imagine Coca-Cola rebranding. That would be throwing away something that took decades to build. You don't just do that on a whim.
 
No surprise, the logo is an overly serious, masculine edifice. A logo for an aftershave called ‘No’. It looks like a band-aid placed the wrong way over a cut. It says denial, rejection, error, stop, close, cancel. If this succeeds, everyone employed in the field of corporate branding should wonder if their job has any purpose at all.

It certainly does that in Japan I can say. There's a sort of code of 4 symbols that often stand for degrees of how acceptable something is.
The symbols are:
◎ 〇 △ ×
The double circle means top-rate. The single circle means good, but not great. The triangle means barely acceptable and the X stands for unacceptable. People use it as a hand gesture too. Crossing your forearms to make an X shape means no, stop, etc.
 
Lol. Like this is going to help.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-66284304



"Hey, did you see what so-and-so x'ed?" "Tweet" at least is easy to understand as a verb and has already entered the lexicon. If you say someone "tweeted" something, people understand what that means. If you they "x'ed" something, people won't understand.

Whatever you think about Twitter, it is at least a recognizable brand. Now you have to start that process over. Imagine Coca-Cola rebranding. That would be throwing away something that took decades to build. You don't just do that on a whim.

could sure go for a cold x of x-cola right now
 

My understanding of Trademark law is that you have to actually use it, or you lose it. You can register a trademark or a logo, but if you don't actually use them in association with any products or services, you could lose the right to those trademarks.

My question is: what product and/or service does Meta actually provide or offer in association with this trademark?
 
My understanding of Trademark law is that you have to actually use it, or you lose it. You can register a trademark or a logo, but if you don't actually use them in association with any products or services, you could lose the right to those trademarks.

My question is: what product and/or service does Meta actually provide or offer in association with this trademark?

You certainly have to defend them.
 
Why Musk wants to change Twitter's name and logo at all has already been covered pretty much; but if you're wondering why Musk is fixated on changing Twitter's name specifically to X, it's because Musk originally had the idea of changing PayPal's name to X back when he worked for them in the early days, and he was so convinced of the greatness of this idea that he allegedly personally purchased the x.com domain name for over a million dollars in the hopes of selling it to PayPal at a substantial profit, plans which were frustrated of course when that just never happened.

If that's truly the case, then what we're seeing is yet another business move driven by a long-standing personal rage over a past rejection. It is important that of all the claims about Twitter being an "everything app", the only clearly envisioned future capability is "payments"; i.e., the domain of PayPal, the company that rejected his genius idea.

It's also...really dumb. We're going to have to move from a very naturally-flowing lingo where a tweet is something that is posted on Twitter to an ambiguous one where an X is something that is posted on X. Considering how ingrained discussion of Twitter and things that happen on it has become in media in general, it's going to make for a very awkward transition. Some are going to just resign to still calling them Twitter and tweets purely for the sake of conversational clarity, and it will be amusing to watch what kind of tantrums Musk will throw over that.
 
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My understanding of Trademark law is that you have to actually use it, or you lose it. You can register a trademark or a logo, but if you don't actually use them in association with any products or services, you could lose the right to those trademarks.

My question is: what product and/or service does Meta actually provide or offer in association with this trademark?

I saw someone pointing out that the 'infinity'-looking Meta symbol has an x-shape in it.

I am not a trademark lawyer.
 
I saw someone pointing out that the 'infinity'-looking Meta symbol has an x-shape in it.
Probably not relevant, IMO. An infinity shape is different enough that nobody would confuse one for the other.

am not a trademark lawyer.
Neither am I, and we can probably assume the same for all of us, unless someone tells us otherwise. However, I do work in a field related to intellectual property, specifically patent translation (but very occasionally other IP-related documents).
 
The App still has the bird

There's an issue with that, at least from the point of view of the iPhone app. As you may be aware, all iPhone apps have to go through a review by Apple before they are allowed to be distributed through the app store.

Unfortunately, a serious technical problem has arisen in that the review engineers are too busy wetting themselves laughing to pass the app.
 

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