Lexicus
Deity
De facto means in fact?
It isn't similar to SLAPP (or "de facto" SLAPP) because manufacturing a knock-off LEGO glock is not "public participation" in any sense of that term.
De facto means in fact?
I have commented on the substance of your argument at length. This is not SLAPP at all, so your arguments based on SLAPP are faulty in their premise. So there isn't much to comment on beyond that. So I wasn't commenting on that particular aspect of your argument. Another thing... this is the Gun Control quarantine thread, not the SLAPP thread. Even assuming I wanted to debate SLAPP (I don't, but I did enjoy John Oliver's piece on it and his hilarious roast of Bob Murray at the endHow about commenting on the substance of my argument wrt why this is bad? This is de facto legal SLAPP. Unless you disagree that anti-SLAPP style regulations are a good thing.
This is a pretty meritless, bad faith argument. Unless you were joking/ being facetious (thus the "lol") It's clearly inspired by LEGO.Could be inspired by mega bloks, lol.
This is another bad faith argument that has no merit at all. They obviously are blatantly copying LEGO's brand. It couldn't be clearer. If you are pretending not to see that then there is nowhere to go from there.As demonstrated above, this hasn't been demonstrated as factual at all. I see no LEGO branding on the device, just a reference to plastic blocks that interlock.
I have commented on the substance of your argument at length.
This is not SLAPP at all, so your arguments based on SLAPP are faulty in their premise. So there isn't much to comment on beyond that.
The reason this is bad is not unlike the reason that anti-SLAPP is a thing. Especially if the reason the gun company backed down was "c" from above.
Given that this is the Gun Control Thread, I will offer some speculation that what is really going on here, is that you (TMIT) are in favor of this product for political reasons related to gun-control/gun-rights/gun-regulation, etc.
So having decided you are on the gunmaker's side, you are attempting to reverse engineer a superior legal and moral position for your chosen side
This is a pretty meritless, bad faith argument. Unless you were joking/ being facetious (thus the "lol") It's clearly inspired by LEGO.
5. Me agreeing that this was the partly the case, but also that Culper had in fact copied LEGO
This is another bad faith argument that has no merit at all. They obviously are blatantly copying LEGO's brand. It couldn't be clearer. If you are pretending not to see that then there is nowhere to go from there.
But you said:Saying X is bad for the same reason SLAPP is bad is not equivalent to saying "X is SLAPP".
That is saying the this is in fact legal Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation.How about commenting on the substance of my argument wrt why this is bad? This is de facto legal SLAPP. Unless you disagree that anti-SLAPP style regulations are a good thing.
But you said:
That is saying the this is in fact legal Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation.
Fair enough, I can kind of see your point. The other thing :Yeah, I didn't frame that properly when I got frustrated and attempted to repeat it. "De facto" usage was wrong in that context. So I admit that mistake, but it still doesn't change the essence of what I said previously, or my argument for why using legal leverage to bully/compel action is a bad thing for similar reasons that SLAPP is a bad thing.
They do not need to be copying LEGO. If they are tarnishing the LEGO brand then they are at fault. If someone was to look at the Block19 and think badly of LEGO because the logo looked so much like it they assumed it was made by LEGO then they would lose on the Tarnishment rules. It is a lot closer than the Deere & Co. v. MTD Prods case:Don't think it's definitive that LEGO is being copied actually.
They do not need to be copying LEGO. If they are tarnishing the LEGO brand then they are at fault. If someone was to look at the Block19 and think badly of LEGO because the logo looked so much like it they assumed it was made by LEGO then they would lose on the Tarnishment rules.
The legal theory of “tarnishment” is of concern to any advertiser who displays its competitor’s brand name in a bad light. Under tarnishment, an action is based on the theory that an unauthorized user of one’s trademark is degrading or casting a negative impression on one’s brand. Generally, the tarnishment cause of action is used when a competing product of an inferior quality has a name similar to a superior and famous brand name. The theory of tarnishment has been extended to advertisements.
In the end, the test of whether a parody is successful is whether there is consumer confusion about the relationship of the parodist and the target brand. Because of the nature of parody, the advertiser is trying to approach and benefit from the other’s brand identity. An acceptable parody, however, must balance two conflicting factors. Use of the other’s trademark must be close enough to the user’s brand name to be recognized, but far enough away as to avoid consumer confusion. Some courts have said that a parodist may use only as much of the original brand name needed to “call to mind” the original brand. Thus, if a company intends to parody another, it should not use the competitor’s entire logo, name or jingle, but only what consumers need to will recognize what their advertisement is referring to.
Firearms are attractive to criminals. Targeted robberies and burglaries to steal them, while unusual, are certainly not unknown. Police have previously issued warnings to the licensed firearms community emphasising personal safety after a spate of robberies targeting licensed firearms owners outside their homes and at rifle ranges; the Guntrader breach could lead to a spate of such crimes.
Because they could not be arsed to do it properly:Now why, after verifying someone purchasing a firearm can do so legally, are they being tracked/geo-located?
Now why, after verifying someone purchasing a firearm can do so legally, are they being tracked/geo-located?
Imagine if people were tracked similarly for other products. If it isn't okay for those, it also isn't okay for legally owned firearms. At least, not if you want coherent policy.
British firearms laws say every transfer of a firearm (sale, drop-off for repair, gift, loan, and so on) must be recorded, with the vast majority of these also being mandatory to report to the police when they happen.
Uhh, just imagine that Amazon would store your address after a purchase...
as opposed to expensive car ownership
Firearms are attractive to criminals. Targeted robberies and burglaries to steal them, while unusual
You mean like, a state-issued alphanumeric sequence uniquely identifying a car with its owner, which has to be updated every year, and which the state can use to track a car and identify the owner if it is used in a crime? Boy, sure would be arbitrary if we had something like that.
That's taxes!
And it doesn't seem to stop cars getting stolen or chopped up or particularly aid in recovery. So it's nice we've tested that one.
They are unusual, though it happens. It's a bad idea. A kid around here used a handgun to try and rob a guy with a CC permit the other week.