My first thought is, why would these big companies bother to sue? Almost invariably, it’ll make them look bad. I sometimes see these T-shirt logos w/ adaptations of product logos, but not that often. I suspect that these T-shirts have not inundated the market. They only appeal to a specialized clientelle.(sp?) (I am a Christian, and I don’t ever see myself wearing one. These T-shirts don’t appeal to me - seem rather dumb.)
If a big company were to sue this smaller Christian T-shirt company, of course all the the major Christian groups throughout the country would kick up a fuss, giving all sorts of negative publicity. And, frankly, I suspect that many of the CEOs of these companies may be either religious themselves, or not terribly offended by the Christian take-off on their logos (or at least not offended enough to risk all that bad publicity.) So, why bother?
so it may not be legal to use trademarks without permission, but the legality deals with how far <if> the trademark’s owner wants to push it, correct?
A large company that has an image to uphold would never dream of pissing off the Christians by shutting down Ma & Pop’s T-shirt shop who misuse the image to glorify God. i hope that made sense
But, that same company would shut down Evil Ed’s Gritty T’s for using the same image to glorify Satan. It’s the same religion. Just a different leader. No one would rally for poor Ed there, now would they?
I guess the moral of my rambling is that you can do anything that you want without fear of reprisal as long as you do it in God’s name?
btw-I became a Christian at age 13. Once I graduated high school, I stopped attending church, but still believe as I did before. It’s just that now I sin a lot more So I’m not degrading Christianity, just wondering why is it that what’s ok for some isn’t ok for others.
No, trademarks are trademarked, or have protection under common law, or both. And logos may be protected as trademarks and as the proper subject matter of copyright as a work under copyright.
The fees and terms do vary from country to country. If you want protection for your mark in a different country, you have to apply there separately. There are no international trademarks.