• You Can Call the Super Bowl the "Super Bowl"

    From Red@21:1/5 to All on Tue Feb 6 17:39:31 2018
    XPost: alt.censorship, gnu.misc.discuss, rec.sport.football.misc

    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/02/you-can-call-super-bowl-super-bowl

    You Can Call the Super Bowl the "Super Bowl"

    Are you going to a Big Game party on Sunday? Or perhaps going to watch
    the pro football championship game? Or take in the majestic splendor
    of the Superb Owl? You can also just call it by its real name: the
    Super Bowl.

    The NFL is infamous for coming down like a ton of bricks on anyone who
    dares use the actual name for the game in public. And it's also famous
    for trying to grab control of the names people started using when the
    NFL’s tactics worked and scared everyone away from saying “Super
    Bowl.” No matter how hard the NFL tries, it doesn’t own the phrase
    “The Big Game,” which has been used for longer than there’s been a
    Super Bowl. But anything that looks like someone making money off of
    the name will attract the NFL’s attention. In 2007, the NFL put a stop
    to an Indiana church’s party for a number of reasons, including that
    the church promoted it as a “Super Bowl bash.”

    The NFL has trademarked the terms “Super Bowl” and “Super Sunday,” but
    that doesn’t mean it actually controls all rights to the phrase.
    Instinctually, we all know that can’t be how the law works. We see and
    use trademarked names for things all the time. Grocery stores
    advertise special deals on Coca-Cola and we put “Windex” on our
    grocery lists. Commercials namecheck competitors by name all the time.

    It doesn’t even make any internal sense. Companies have trademarks so
    that they can have something that everyone instantly recognizes, not
    so that they suddenly become Voldemort and can’t be named out of fear.

    Having a trademark means being able to make sure no one can slap the
    name of your product onto theirs and confuse buyers into thinking
    they’re getting the real thing. It also means stopping an instance
    where using the name might make someone think it’s an endorsement or sponsorship. If neither of those things happens, you can call the
    Super Bowl the Super Bowl. The ability to use something’s trademarked
    name to identify it—even in a commercial—is called “nominative fair
    use.” Because the trademark is its name.

    Thankfully, the NFL and the Super Bowl are really good at letting us
    know who has paid astronomical amounts to get the NFL’s endorsement.
    Ads end with things like “official vehicle sponsor of the NFL” and
    there’s a whole page of sponsor names on the Super Bowl’s website.
    There are so many instantly recognizable ways to know who has
    partnered with the NFL and who hasn’t that no one can think your party
    is an official, NFL-sponsored get together. No one thought that about
    the one at the church in 2007.

    The reason no one says “Super Bowl” has nothing to do with the law and everything to do with the massive amount of resources the NFL has
    brought to bear on the issue. Its pockets are very deep, its will is
    strong, and its desire for control ravenous. But its scare tactics
    don’t change the fact that you can totally say “Super Bowl.”

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