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Pastimes : Business Wire Falls for April Fools Prank, Sues FBNers -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Don Pueblo who wrote (1298)5/2/1999 11:32:00 AM
From: Razorbak  Respond to of 3795
 
Oh, come on. Somebody just post something, for crying out loud so Janice can get her Double Zero. <ggg>



To: Don Pueblo who wrote (1298)5/2/1999 11:36:00 AM
From: TideGlider  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3795
 
I posted this for casual interest!
JUST FOR FUN

April 15, 1999

Store Sues Amazon.com for Trademark

ASSOCIATED PRESS

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Amazon Bookstore Inc. is
suing Amazon.com in federal court, alleging the
Internet giant that sells books, music and videos is
knowingly infringing on the smaller store's trademark.

The bookstore, in a lawsuit filed April 7 in U.S. District
Court in Minneapolis, seeks cancellation of
Amazon.com's federal trademark registrations using
the word Amazon and asks that Seattle-based
Amazon.com stop using the name.

The lawsuit also seeks unspecified monetary
damages.

Amazon Bookstore, a 2,000-square-foot,
women-oriented Minneapolis bookstore, stocks
25,000 titles and mails a newsletter to more than
2,500 people across the United States and in 11 other
countries.

"We get a lot of phone calls daily from people thinking
we're Amazon.com. Sometimes they were upset they
hadn't gotten an order," bookstore President Barb
Wieser said Wednesday.

The bookstore at first ignored the problem, but it has
escalated with the growth of Amazon.com, Wieser
said. Sales of Amazon.com grew from $147.8 million
in 1997, the year the company went public, to $610
million in 1998.

"We get e-mail, we get faxes. It's clearly very confused
in the public's mind. We get invoices from publishers.
We have to explain that we're not Amazon.com,"
Wieser said.

"It's very galling to us that they took our name. It's very
galling to us that they ignored our presence. We've
been around for almost 30 years. We've worked hard
to be who we are. It's very hard to see that taken
away," she said.

Paul Capelli, spokesman for Amazon.com, said
officials of the Seattle-based company had not been
formally served with the lawsuit and declined comment
until they had seen and studied it.

Attorney Mathias Samuel, representing the bookstore,
said the bookstore had not registered the trademark
but claims common law ownership through longtime
use.

"It's been listed in the phone book for years. They've
had a 1-800 number. They've been on the Internet
since September 1996," Samuel said. Amazon
Bookstore has been a member of the American
Booksellers Association since 1986, while
Amazon.com has been a member since 1994, he
noted.

The goal of the lawsuit is to stop the confusion,
Samuel said.

"We believe that the only way for that to happen is for
them to stop using the name Amazon," he said. "The
rapid growth and vast size of Amazon.com, along with
its massive marketing expenditures, is overwhelming
Amazon Bookstore."

Printable text version of this story

Search terms highlighted: amazon natural treasures

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