Silverplum
Senior Member
Thank you.Consult an attorney.
You're welcome.
Thank you.Consult an attorney.
You're welcome.
And how do you know? You would be surprised how many people I have seen in my industry who believe the product was okay, when it was counterfeit.The items that I sold were not counterfeit.
I have no idea why the insistence on a phone call. It is not a typical way for a rights-holder to contact an infringer (or someone suspected of infringing).What would be their reasoning behind insisting I make a phone call to them? Is this to somehow try and intimidate or threaten me? Wouldn't this have to be put in writing anyway?
You should ask yourself if you can afford to not consult an attorney.Thank you, I will consider consulting an attorney assuming I can find one whom I can afford.
If you have a law school in your area, you might find some free assistance there.Thank you, I will consider consulting an attorney assuming I can find one whom I can afford.
A mistake I made only once. Live and learn.I bought them from a Chinese online marketer and they were so cheap I should have realized they were not official products.
I actually don't think Sony is any more aggressive than many famous-name trademark holders (e.g., Disney, NFL).A mistake I made only once. Live and learn.
Even if the controllers were really original and legit, I'm not surprised at all that a VERO and/or C&D was sent out. Sony is insanely overly aggressive on eBay auctions. I've railed against their own shady record on this forum in the past, and will withhold any further comment on the matter as my opinions would certainly be pretty disparaging.
Two (or two million) wrongs don't make a right.
Throw the controllers in the trash; they're not worth anything now. Whatever you're currently selling isn't worth the headache either.
(This is really going off topic but .. )I actually don't think Sony is any more aggressive than many famous-name trademark holders (e.g., Disney, NFL).
Unfortunately, these trademark holders HAVE to be aggressive, to preserve their rights in their marks.
There are many many people out there (looking at you here, China ) wanting to illegally make money off them.
By "insanely" and "overly", I meant that Sony has a penchant for claiming copyright and trademark violations for things that don't violate either. I'm not overstating that; the company with one of the dirtiest histories of consumer rights abuses is also one of the biggest abusers of overly broad DMCA and VERO takedowns.I actually don't think Sony is any more aggressive than many famous-name trademark holders (e.g., Disney, NFL).
Unfortunately, these trademark holders HAVE to be aggressive, to preserve their rights in their marks.
There are many many people out there (looking at you here, China ) wanting to illegally make money off them.
Counterfeiters cost companies billions of dollars every year in lost revenue.(This is really going off topic but .. )
Since you mentioned China, I'm currently following what's happening on the counterfeit makeup scene. Yes, counterfeit makeup. A multi-million (billion?) dollar industry.
Too many people don't realize where their certain high-end brands actually are made or, perhaps worse, under what kind of conditions - and that's not even touching on the counterfeit versions (and many wouldn't be able to tell the difference).
so, if you use counterfeit makeup it makes you ugly? It doesn't really hide the wrinkles?(This is really going off topic but .. )
Since you mentioned China, I'm currently following what's happening on the counterfeit makeup scene. Yes, counterfeit makeup. A multi-million (billion?) dollar industry.
Too many people don't realize where their certain high-end brands actually are made or, perhaps worse, under what kind of conditions - and that's not even touching on the counterfeit versions (and many wouldn't be able to tell the difference).
After just a very brief google into your topic, I came to the conclusion that it's on the level with one I have dealt with for years: counterfeit electronics components. In that case, someone usually steals a legit recipe or schematic from a larger company (e.g. Samsung) and goes to work for some upstart. In the first famous case of that in the late 1990s, we had to deal with horrible quality capacitors industry-wide for over a decade.(This is really going off topic but .. )
Since you mentioned China, I'm currently following what's happening on the counterfeit makeup scene. Yes, counterfeit makeup. A multi-million (billion?) dollar industry.
Too many people don't realize where their certain high-end brands actually are made or, perhaps worse, under what kind of conditions - and that's not even touching on the counterfeit versions (and many wouldn't be able to tell the difference).
. In the first famous case of that in the late 1990s, we had to deal with horrible quality capacitors industry-wide for over a decade.
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That dirty capacitor recipe (the thief didn't have the formula quite right) spread so far through Chinese manufacturers that we only had one single source of actual quality capacitors, and their price skyrocketed. I had sold many hundreds of new PC systems before we found out they would all fail early, even those with top brand parts we had come to trust. Of the major manufacturers, only IBM never hit the capacitor problem, because at the time they still had their own PC manufacturing operations in the US. Now, every single PC, Mac, tablet, phone, and game console part is made in China and Taiwan, save a few of the chips. A repeat of that episode would leave us with no recourse to fix the problems.ahhh, I had to deal with that. Fluorescent light ballast use capacitors and there were a lot of bad ones on the market. Had some that didn't last until the end of the day. I had one customer (a social security office) where I would stop by every week just top replace whatever ballasts went bad. Usually 4-5 a week, until I replaced them all with newer ones after they figured out the bad capacitor problem.