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Comments
That would have had to have been in 2011, as Genesis was introduced in October of that year.
The system is so broken it is ridiculous. But it should be possible to simply grant a exception. You just saw a photograph of various Daz logos on a computer. Maybe those came from a legit source, but how do you differentiate between the two? How do you know? If somebody was selling items with logos without permission, that would certainly be wrong, but this is personal use.
It also completely neglects one of the traditions of comicons...bootlegs. You can find and buy any number of completely unlicensed merchandise with things like Batman and Spiderman logos.
Yet these comicons happen every year with zero enforcment of neither trademark or copyright. They are not trying to enforce their trademarks!
So why then does Batman still have his trademark?
Or how a sports fan might paint their house/truck/driveway with their favorite team's logo. People have tattoos of these logos, which by their nature, are reproductions. Are sports teams sueing their fans for using their trademarks merely to extress their fandom?
Just where is this line?
Thus why allowing a user to have a Daz logo on a hat for their own personal use should not be any cause for concern to anybody. And again, I would consider this free marketing, not a form of infringement. If it needs to be done, that is path the Daz legal dept should take. The Daz logo is not Aspirin. But I seriously doubt any court would revoke a trademark because a fan printed a logo for their own personal use. That is absurd.
I have been told that those associated with the publisher have strict orders to avoid the merchandise areas so that they won't see and have to act on the infringing products. That was low-level gossip rather than official word, but it might well be a way to avoid a PR disaster while maintaining trademarks undiluted.