Almostlity wrote:macs dicklickers are in the building
lololololol
only 3 of them, even rebecca black has more fans then him.
Almostlity wrote:macs dicklickers are in the building
lololololol

Drama Setter wrote:Block wrote:NOBODY RESPOND AFTER THIS POST. LET MACFAGGOT FADE INTO OBSCURITY.
Go fuck yourself anywhere else
@mac : dude your phrase is really worth-using




A copyright protects your work legally by proving you are the original author. According to the U.S. Copyright Office, you can copyright literary, dramatic, musical and artistic works, but not names, titles, slogans or short phrases. In some cases, however, you may be able to protect a phrase or slogan as a trademark through the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)

EG. wrote:and i dont even like hot dog


Individuals and companies can apply for a trademark on a short phrase by going through the US Patents and Trademark Office (USPTO). The USPTO can assign registered trademark status to a short phrase if originality can be satisfactorily proven. For example, the short phrase "Just Do It." followed by a distinctive "swoosh" graphic is a trademark of the Nike company. Another shoe company could not legally use that trademarked phrase in its own advertising or promotional materials.


Kez wrote:Yeah I remember Sac trying to sue us when he was stupid enough to give us a grand.
Look how that ended up



macdaddy019967 wrote:Kez wrote:Yeah I remember Sac trying to sue us when he was stupid enough to give us a grand.
Look how that ended up
Difference is I work with trademark and copyrights
you cannot copyright a phrase for the purpose of legal protection. Copyright laws primarily cover "original works of authorship" that are finalized in fixed form of expression. This can include fixed forms of unique ideas, compositions, plays, novels, song lyrics and so on, but they do not cover individual words, common ideas or short phrases. While the desire to copyright a phrase closely associated with a business or an artistic concept may be understandable, US federal copyright laws would not offer much in the way of enforceable protection.

EG. wrote:and i dont even like hot dog


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