mr x wrote:That's not the point. Magic Hat is using the Beatles song as marketing for their beer. That isn't debatable (unless you are a moron). What grounds do they have to say to another company that they can't steal the stuff they stole? There is no apples and oranges.BrewBum wrote:
That may be but and a big but here, The Beatles song bares no resemblance or competition in the space of beer and having a big fat number 9 on a beer label sitting next to another beer with a 9 on the label could easily add confusion to the buyer of said beer. A beer with a 9 on it sitting next to a CD from the Beatles would not create the same confusion, unless you are a moron, hence apples and oranges.
I won the Special Olympics 100m dash by my tongue.
BrewBum's point (I think) is that isn't how trademark infringement works. It only matters in similar industries. Look at American Apparel, and American Airlines. Same Font, similar layout/design. Nobody goes to American Apparel to buy a shitty ticket. According to the law, it's apples and oranges.




