A major Italian clothing company has a U.S. trademark on the word "Jesus." The trademark gives "Jesus Jeans" the exclusive rights to sell pants, shirts, jackets, and other clothes bearing Jesus' name.
The company says it doesn't mind if places like churches make a few T-shirts, but when businesses sell "Jesus" products to make money, its lawyers clamp down on them.
A man who puts together Christian social functions in Virginia sold T-shirts and hoodies under the name "Jesus Surfed." He got a letter from "Jesus Jeans" telling him to stop. Something similar happened to at least five other "Jesus" clothing companies.
U.S. trademark law is generally designed to protect consumers and the people who invest in making products. The idea is to prevent confusion over who truly makes a product. That way, brands that are good can easily be spotted and bought and brands that are bad can easily be avoided.
At least ten other countries refused to grant the trademark including Britain, which called the idea "morally offensive to the public."
Monday, February 25 2013 1:41 PM EST2013-02-25 18:41:37 GMT
Just as Oscar host Seth MacFarlane set his sights on a variety of targets with a mixture of hits and misses, the motion picture academy spread the gold around to a varied slate of films.
Just as Oscar host Seth MacFarlane set his sights on a variety of targets with a mixture of hits and misses, the motion picture academy spread the gold around to a varied slate of films.
Tuesday, February 5 2013 3:09 PM EST2013-02-05 20:09:54 GMT
Millions and millions of people tuned in to watch the Super Bowl, and including our friends serving overseas. Thousands of Chicago-style pizzas were sent overseas Tuesday.
Millions and millions of people tuned in to watch the Super Bowl, and including our friends serving overseas. Thousands of Chicago-style pizzas were sent overseas Tuesday.
Beauty used to be in the eye of the beholder. Nowadays, a phone-app is making some of the judgments. More than 5 million people have bought the "Ugly-Meter" app. Here's how it works: You take a photo,
Beauty used to be in the eye of the beholder. Nowadays, a phone-app is making some of the judgments. More than 5 million people have bought the "Ugly-Meter" app.
There's debate about how a school in Georgia -- and the local police department -- handled a 6- year- old who apparently threw a violent temper tantrum.