Two groups, one name, no joy, as bands and lawyers head in One Direction
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According to US One Direction's lawyer Peter Ross, Cowell’s company should have known better than to bring the UK band to America as One Direction, since he claims UK One Direction was made aware of the US One Direction when it attempted to file its US trade mark application. He is quoted in numerous sources as saying 'Rather than change their name or do anything to avoid confusion or avoid damage to our goodwill, they chose to press ahead and come on their tour'. As proof of the confusion, US One Direction pointed to a recent segment on NBC's Today Show where the UK One Direction was shown, but accompanied accidentally by music from the US One Direction.
A spokesperson for Cowell’s Syco Entertainment is reported as saying 'there is a dispute with a local group in California about the ownership of the One Direction name in the US. One Direction’s management tried to resolve the situation amicably when the matter first came to light, but the Californian group has now filed a law suit claiming they own the name. One Direction’s lawyers now have no choice but to defend the lawsuit and the band’s right to use their name.'
The IPKat wonders if it might be hard to prove that the US One Direction has actually been harmed by the attention. Indeed, it would appear that the US One Direction has received significantly more attention and music sales than it might otherwise have had, thanks to the confusion with the UK One Direction ...
Merpel speculates that surely it is a sign that one has made the big time is when other people are willing to pay AU$100,000 for a piece of your discarded toast. Last week, while in Sydney, UK One Direction appeared on breakfast television show Sunrise. During the program Niall Horan offered to try some Vegemite spread on plain white toast. He took a large bite, but then had to spit it out in a napkin. The producers of Sunrise apparently put the remaining piece of bread with Niall’s bite marks up for auction on eBay soon with the proceeds going to the Australian charity YoungCare. The auction was taken down prematurely with the highest bid at AU$100,000.
Last word goes to the IPKat, who observes that the existence of groups with the same name is not a new phenomenon. He has already noted episodes involving the Rhythmix, Nirvana (ibid) and Buck's Fizz, and recalls plenty more name-sharing: The Seekers, The Spinners, The Rebels and Spirogyra/Spiro Gyra. float swiftly into his mind. No doubt, in an attempt to get "with it" and make intellectual property more relevant to the generation of youngsters who consume IP faster than it can be created or protected, the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) will soon be convening a Committee of Experts and examining the basis for a new International Convention on the International Registration of the Names of Collective Performance Entities ...