I have had a new idea. I like this one best, I really think it's great for my app. .com domain is squatted but maybe I would buy it eventually. The problem is that I have found some company using this name for their product. The product is like an interactive computer board for classroom use. So it's kinda related to computing, but it isn't software. The name is a combination of 2 words, but itself isn't a proper word. I guess I can't use it, because it isn't a generic word, right?
A combination of two words (a
portmanteau word) would generally be considered a
strong trademark (like Microcomputer+Software=Microsoft). Ogden Nash and Lewis Carroll writings are filled with portmanteau words. These marks are as a rule offered the greatest protection under US trademark laws (as are coined or made-up words like Kodak and Tylenol, and as are arbitrary words like Penguin for books and Diesel for clothing and Beefeater for gin).
In other words, the trademark you ran across that is a combination of two generic words does not make the trademark available for use despite its use of generic words. The combining of two generic words can, in fact, make the trademark stronger than other marks you might run across and far riskier to use for your own product.
Again the advice remains that it is always
best to come up with a
unique name for your product - one that is NOT in use by others (in whole or in part) - and to seek out the help of a trademark attorney in your part of the world for direction.
What might help you (and what might not ...
) is a look at the Trademark Examiner's Manual, to show you what a trademark examiner looks at when determining if a mark is eligible for registration. Here is a link to access to the Manual, offered from the United States Patent and Trademark Office:
https://mpep.uspto.gov/RDMS/TMEP/current
Your struggle to come up with a good and proper name to identify your company/product is a struggle worth making. Choosing the right trademark is important. Good luck, dev456.