Examples of Registered Trademark in the following topics:
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- A brand owner may seek to protect proprietary rights in relation to a brand by registering the trademark such that it becomes a "Registered Trademark. " Also, a firm or licensor can also grant the right to use their brand name, patents or sales knowledge in exchange for some form of payment.
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- In some circumstances, a business may obtain a "common law" trademark.
- Generally, American businesses will register their logo with the U.S.
- Patent and Trademark Office.
- The value of a trademark can also be quite low.
- Trademarks are not amortized since each is considered to have an indefinite life, meaning a perception exists that a trademark can retain its value forever.
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- What are the governmental processes for securing a trademark for your brand?
- "Trade marking" is the process one goes through to register with a government entity the text and or visual depiction of your business name and, if applicable, the business mark that accompanies the venture.
- You can find many examples of logos in the process of being trademarked in the United States through the United States Trademark and Patent Office website that posts online "The Trademark Gazette".
- Here is an example of one issue of The Trademark Gazette: http://www.uspto.gov/web/trademarks/tmog/20081230_OG.pdf
- Trademarks are considered assets to a business and have a monetary value if and when you want to sell or merge your venture.
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- Is not the same as some other project's name, and does not infringe on any trademarks.
- For the U.S., trademark searches are available at uspto.gov.
- Even if you intend to host the project at some other site (see the section called "Hosting"), you can still register project-specific domains and forward them to the hosting site.
- So when you start a project, think about what its online handle should be and register that handle with the online services you think you're likely to care about.
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- The best understood of the sensory registers (SRs) are for hearing (echoic) and seeing (iconic).
- In the cup example, light reflecting off the cup hits my eye; the image is transferred through my optic nerve to the sensory register.
- For the visual sensory register, for example, representation is iconic-- limited to the field of vision, and lasts for about 250 milliseconds.
- Representation in the auditory register is echoic (based on sound); its duration is 2-3 seconds, it is only limited to the sounds we actually can hear and decay is the primary cause for forgetting.
- As previously mentioned, much less is known about the other three register types.
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- A software company has a trademark valued at $10 million with an indefinite useful life.
- Due to market conditions, the company believes the trademark's value has decreased and tests it for impairment at the end of the year.
- Year end calculations reveal the trademark is valued at $8 million and an impairment loss of $2 million is recorded as a debit to Loss on Trademark Impairment on the income statement and a credit to Accumulated Impairment Losses on the balance sheet (disclosed as a contra asset account to the intangible asset).
- Some examples of indefinite-life intangibles are goodwill, trademarks, and perpetual franchises.
- They include trade secrets, copyrights, patents, and trademarks.
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- A register is a distinctive part of a vocal or instrumental range.
- For example, singers may speak of the head register, in the upper part of their range, and the chest register in the lower part of their range.
- These two registers sound and feel very different, and the singer may have even have two distinct tessituras, one in each register.
- The large range of the clarinet is also divided into distinctive registers with different capabilities and very different timbres.
- Even when an instrument does not have a very large variation in timbre over its range, its players may speak of the difficulty of "playing in the high register" or a "dull timbre in the low register".
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- In business format franchises (which are the most common type), a company expands by supplying independent business owners with an established business, including its name and trademark.
- Through this kind of agreement, manufacturers allow retailers to distribute their products and to use their names and trademarks.
- Through manufacturing franchises, a franchiser grants a manufacturer the right to produce and sell goods using its name and trademark.
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- For organizations worried about trademark control, therefore, the revised BSD license may be slightly preferable to MIT/X.
- In general, however, a liberal copyright license does not imply that recipients have any right to use or dilute your trademarks — copyright law and trademark law are two different beasts.
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- Bonds may be registered as to principal (or face value of the bond) or as to both principal and interest.
- Most bonds in our economy are registered as to principal only.
- For a bond registered as to both principal and interest, the issuer pays the bond interest by check.
- To transfer ownership of registered bonds, the owner endorses the bond and registers it in the new owner's name.Therefore, owners can easily replace lost or stolen registered bonds.
- These are not registered as to interest.