Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Chew 8888889 today!

If selling numeric domains was prohibited do you think people would put in the effort to find rare facts about what numbers may mean in other languages? One domainer on DNForum named 'http', who is selling the number domain 8888889.com, has done some interesting research on the meaning of numbers in China.

8888889.com is one of those long numeric domains that you rarely see being sold. NNNNN.com's are listed for sale daily, sometimes hourly, however numerics at six+ digits are not as well sought after and lack liquidity in the marketplace. Domainers collect these longer pure number domains when they spell a word, or a vanity number, or if they mean something in another language.

'Http' writes that, in Chinese, the word for "eight" sounds similar to the word for "prosper" or "wealth", that the (word for) number 9 sounds like the word for "longlasting" and that '88' resembles the symbol for joy or happiness. And in Cantonese the words for "eight" and "fortune" are also similar. Http even found out that a fish farm in Singapore uses numbers with lots of eights in their microchip tag numbers especially for their best fish!

So, if some folks in Singapore were now overhearing you read this blog aloud, they would interpret http's domain, 8888889.com, as meaning joy-joy-joy-longlasting.

It almost sounds like a chewing gum. 'Triple longlasting flavor. Chew 8888889 today!'

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Monday, July 14, 2008

ChaCha ventures into uncharted trademark territory; revised




Jamptap recently noticed that ChaCha has been attaching the 'TM' (trademark) designation to the phrase '242242' on its website and press communications. Similarly, trademark protection for '242242' and '24224' is mentioned on ChaCha.com's 'Term of Use' page:
CHACHA, the CHACHA logo, SEARCH + BRAINPOWER, YOUR PARTNER IN SEARCH, WANNA CHACHA?, CHACHA CHING, ARE YOU READY TO CHACHA?, CHACHA RESEARCH, TEAMRANK, WEBGEMS, CHACHA CONNECT, 242242 or 24224 as well as other trademarks and logos and other names of ChaCha's products and services referenced on the Site are exclusively owned by ChaCha. All other products, services, and company names mentioned on the Site are the trademarks of their respective owners. By placing them on the Site, ChaCha does not grant to you any license or other authorization to copy, reproduce, or use the trademarks or logos, except as provided herein.

What's going on? Well, the alternative search engine company filed for a trademark of the number '242242' on February 13, 2008. The mark was a 'standard character' trademark registration not restricted to a specific graphical representation - meaning not for any particular style or font. ChaCha's type of mark is called a servicemark, which is the same thing as a trademark but is a designation used by companies that market services when they don't have a package to put their mark on. Why ChaCha isn't using the SM designation, and 'TM' instead, is unknown.

ChaCha's servicemark was published for opposition on July 8 and any potential opponents have thirty days to file their opposition. If there is no opposition, or any opposition is overcome, the registration will be issued in a few short months.

You may be thinking, 'Wait a second. You CAN'T trademark numbers.'

Not true.

Many companies have brands that they registered trademarks for, such as Levi's 501 Jeans and Boeing's 747.

For these companies and ChaCha, the trademarked number pertains to marketing use within a specific realm of services. So, any other company outside of ChaCha's realm of services, like meatpackers or an airline company or an apparel firm, can use and register for the mark '242242'. However a company that provides search engine services - related to interactivity on wireless devices, etc... - cannot market its services using '242242'. That would infringe on ChaCha's mark.

This isn't the first time that a web company sought a service mark for its wordnumber. 4INFO, a competitor of ChaCha that provides a similar type of text message search service, has a registered servicemark for '44636', which spells 4INFO on a cell phone keypad. That mark was filed in May 2006 and registered in February 2007. 4INFO doesn't attach the SM/TM designation to its '44636' mark, most likely because its wordnumber isn't a key component of its marketing/product strategy, unlike ChaCha which plasters the term '242242' everywhere you see the word ChaCha or wherever its CEO Brad Bostic speaks or goes.

Still confused? Generic words and numbers may be registered as trademarks however only for a very narrow category of goods and services. A generic word mark can be used if it isn't used generically within the business you're in. For instance, a text messaging company named 'mobile' wouldn't be able to register that word for its mark. The litmus test for trademarking numbers is if the relevant consuming public has developed a strong mental association between the number and the products the company sells. Almost 100% of the time, a numeric trademark is granted when the public has already established a link between the number brand and your company. For ChaCha, the USPTO believed that the public easily associates the number '242242' with ChaCha.

Houston there's a problem: Registering wordmarks for numbers that 'act' as wordnumbers might be a problem. What if we see a new mobile company emerge whose brand coincides with the numbers 2-4-2-2-4-2 on a phone keypad. There are thousands of letter combinations that can be created using the wordnumber 242242, including generic words like Bibbia ('Bible' in Italian), or a new word/brand such as 'Cicaga'. If a few folks get together and want to brand 'Bibbia' or 'Cicaga' as a text message search service and promote the corresponding wordnumber 242242, then what will happen? Well, for the next month or so, they can oppose ChaCha's application. Beyond, that would be a very interesting trademark confrontation for ChaCha's lawyers.

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Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Brain teasers gone numeric

'Priscilla Gone Missing,' an escape-adventure-flash game like the famous 'Crimson Room' brain teaser mystery, utilizes a wordnumber for one of the steps. Translate a string of four letters that appears on the ground into the corresponding numbers on an on-screen keypad and 'you're in' [the elevator, that is].

Play the game at http://www.a123.com/games/969/Pricilla_Gone_Missing

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