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106-Wireless
Telephone®© ServiceMark
Guidelines / The TeleKey Group - 1902
What is a Wireless
Telephone®© Registered
Mark?
Photo:
The 1902 "TeleKey Group." Nathan B.
Stubblefield, GEs E.J. Houston, A. F.
Collins, and Tesla.
Wireless Telephone Demonstrations in
Washington, DC;
Philadelphia
-
1902.
Nikola
Tesla and Clarissa, the lady dressed in
white in the photo, are the featured in
the screenplay - Wireless
Telephone®© - The Movie -
Firewire187 &,
Watermelons.
See
More About - Wireless
Cemeteries.
02
WebTalk
02
What is a NBS
Wireless Telephone®©
ServiceMark?
Today's NBS Wireless
Telephone®© trademark
headlines various United States and
foreign nations Copyrights, Patents,
Schematics,
and drawing protected under the rules
of the 1905 Bern
Convention.
All
Wireless Telephone®© Marks
have been published, filed and registered
with various U.S.A. intellectual property
rights agencies, theLibrary of Congress,
ICAAN, and other foreign government
agencies, and Web societies . . during the
last 105 years, commencing in 1892.
The symbolic
Trademark itself is a
word derived from the word
telephony, the device used for land-lines,
(i.e. - telephony, telegraphy). A
trademark or copyright usually identifies
the goods, products or services of a
person or company and distinguishes them
from the goods, products and services of
others.
"Wireless Telephone - 1902," did just that
for the inventor, Nathan B. Stubblefield,
and his Wireless Telephone Organization,"
says Mark Anderson, the PSI affiliate of
wirelesstelephone.org.
"In respect to those goods or services
that utilizes the elements and effects of
the products derived from the "Wireless
Telephone - 1902," -- the phone number . .
. "is the number one element that has made
today's world . . . a SmartPhone
paradise."
02
Since that
time --the marks
used to describe the U.S.
Wireless Telephone®©
invention can readily assures today's
Consumers-User . . . that they are being
assigned a Wireless
Telephone®© intellectual
property - that works, and is being
maintained under govenment control, by an
authorized carrier for profit, i.e.:
FCC, FTC, AT&T, Sprint, Verizone,
and T-Mobile.
Of course," says Troy
Cory-Stubblefield, "that includes a global
portfolio full of NBS100 and Smart90.com
trademarks, and a portfolia of contains
over 5-billion Wireless
Telephone®© phone numbers.
The Phone
Number that contains a Country Code --
an Area Code, and the 7 digital
NBS Wireless Telephone®©
code number, is what makes your domain
name, e- commerce
website, and VoIP Vonage system work. The
numbers guarantee the consistent quality
from point to point. This same system was
first demonstrated during the "Wireless
Telephone - demonstrations held in
1902."
-
Why is it important to use marks
correctly?
Rights
to a trademark can last indefinitely if
the owner continues to use the mark to
identify its goods and services. If
trademarks are not used properly, they may
be lost and one of the company's most
important assets may lose all of its
value. Rights may be lost not only because
of a trademark owner's improper use of the
mark, but through improper use of the
trademark by the public.
02
General
Information
Third Party Users of
Wireless Telephone®©
-03
New Guidelines for Third Party Use of
Wireless Telephone®© Brand
Features - Using a /your Website
Use of NBS Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Features
/ Although we'd like to accommodate
all the requests we receive from users who
want to add a touch of Wireless
Telephone®© to their sites,
we are passionate about protecting the
reputation of our brand as an objective
and fair provider of search results.
That means we have to turn down many
requests because sites imply that Wireless
Telephone®© is endorsing
them or is otherwise affiliated with them.
The same applies if NBS's Wireless
Telephone®© trademarks,
logos, copyrighted web pages, screen
shots, or other distinctive features
("Wireless Telephone®©
Brand Features" or "Brand Features") are
associated with objectionable material, as
determined by Wireless
Telephone®©.
These Brand Features can be used only
pursuant to these Guidelines, our Terms
and Conditions, and for the specific
purposes for which Wireless
Telephone®© has given
permission. If you have a written
agreement with Wireless
Telephone®© that
specifically addresses how you may use its
Brand Features, you don't need to go
through the approval process here unless
you want to do something other than what
has been authorized in your existing
agreement. Otherwise, the only time you
can use Brand Features without advance
written permission is if there is clear
and express language on our website
stating that you can use those Brand
Features without first obtaining
permission, such as is the case with our
search boxes.
When you use any of our Brand Features,
you must always follow the Rules for
Proper Usage included in these Guidelines.
In addition, Wireless
Telephone®© may provide you
with written requirements as to the size,
typeface, colors, and other graphic
characteristics of the Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Features
of it's Elements & Effects. If we
provide these requirements to you at the
time of our approval, you must implement
them before using our Brand Features. If
we provide these requirements to you after
we initially gave our permission, you must
implement them within a commercially
reasonable timeframe.
- Rules for
Proper Usage of Wireless
Telephone®©
Service Marks established in 1902.
03
Things To Do
When the the Wireless Telephone
Company of America, introduced the NBS
Wireless Telephone®© Marks
in 1902 . . . the distinguished trademark
device was surrounding by distinguished
men from GE, Westinghouse, like Tesla,
Houston. (See Above Photo).
When using our Marks, you should
surrounding the Wireless
Telephone®© Marks with your
own text in some way or another. You can
always Capitalize the first letter "W,"
capitalize or italicize the entire mark,
place the mark in quotes, use a different
type style or font for the mark than for
the generic name.
If you do not capitalize the entire mark,
always spell and capitalize the trademark
exactly as they are shown in the Wireless
Telephone®© Trademarks and
Suggested Accepted Generic Terms
below.
Use the trademark only as an adjective,
never as a noun or verb, and never in the
plural or possessive form. Use
wirelesstelephone.org when in
doubt.
Use a generic term following the
trademark, for example: Wireless
Telephone®©
speedollars.com, Wireless
Telephone®© preventing
ID-Theft, Wireless
Telephone®© the Movie,
Wireless Telephone®© search
engine, Wireless
Telephone®© search,
Wireless Telephone®© web
search, Wireless
Telephone®© web users
guild.
Use only Wireless
Telephone®© -approved
artwork when using NBS's Wireless
Telephone®© logos.
If you are using a Wireless
Telephone®© logo on a web
page, there must exist a minimum spacing
of 25 pixels between each side of the logo
and other graphic or textual elements on
your web page.
05
Things You Can't
Do With
The NBS Wireless
Telephone®© - 1902
      
106-Wireless
Telephone®© ServiceMark
Guidelines / Page 1.
Normally, an unregistered Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Feature
should be followed by the letters TM or
SM, or the superscripted letters TM or SM
or ®©, to give notice that
the company claims trademark rights in the
term. A registered Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Feature
should be followed by the symbol ® to
identify the term as a registered
trademark.
In advertising copy, notice of trademark
rights may be provided in a footnote
format -- e.g., by placing an asterisk
adjacent to the Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Feature
and placing an appropriate notice at the
bottom of the page on which the asterisk
appears. Example: *Wireless
Telephone®© is a trademark
of Wireless Telephone®©
Inc.
One of the conditions for all uses is that
you can't mess around with our marks. Only
we get to do that. Don't remove, distort
or alter any element of a Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Feature.
That includes modifying a Wireless
Telephone®© trademark, for
example, through hyphenation, combination
or abbreviation, such as: WiTELiscious,
WiTELly, Wireless
Telephone®© mania. Do not
shorten, abbreviate, or create acronyms
out of Wireless Telephone®©
trademarks.
#04
Do's
and Don'ts of
Using Service Marks - By: Mark
Anderson
Don't
display a Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Feature
as the most prominent element on your web
page.
Don't
display a Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Feature
in any manner that implies a relationship
or affiliation with, sponsorship, or
endorsement by
WirelessTelephone®© , or
that can be reasonably interpreted to
suggest editorial content has been
authored by, or represents the views or
opinions of Wireless
Telephone®© or Wireless
Telephone®© personnel.
Don't
display a Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Feature
on any web site that contains or displays
adult content, promotes gambling, involves
the sale of tobacco or alcohol to persons
under twenty-one years of age, or
otherwise violates applicable law.
Don't
display a Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Feature
in a manner that is in Wireless
Telephone®© 's sole opinion
misleading, unfair, defamatory,
infringing, libelous, disparaging, obscene
or otherwise objectionable to Wireless
Telephone®© .
Don't
display a Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Feature
on a site that violates any law or
regulation.
Don't
frame or mirror any Wireless
Telephone®© page (including
the page that appears in response to a
click on the Wireless
Telephone®© logo or
Wireless Telephone®© search
box).
Don't
incorporate Wireless
Telephone®© Brand Features
into your own product name, service names,
trademarks, logos, or company names.
Don't
copy or imitate Wireless
Telephone®© 's trade dress,
including the look and feel of Wireless
Telephone®© web design
properties or Wireless
Telephone®© brand
packaging, distinctive color combinations,
typography, graphic designs, product
icons, or imagery associated with Wireless
Telephone®©.
Don't
adopt marks, logos, slogans, or designs
that are confusingly similar to our Brand
Features.
Don't
register Wireless
Telephone®© trademarks as
second-level domain names.
Don't
use Wireless Telephone®©
trademarks in a way that suggests a
common, descriptive, or generic
meaning.
Trademark rights vary from country to
country. Some countries have severe
criminal and civil penalties for improper
use of the registration symbol. Therefore,
don't use the registration symbol (®)
in countries where the mark has not been
registered.
If there is any question about usage,
requests for clarification or permission
may be submitted through the process
outlined at: http://www.nbslegal.net.
Trademarks and Suggested Accepted Generic
Term.
The following are some of the trademarks
owned by Wireless
Telephone®© Inc. and the
suggested generic terms for those
trademarks.
///
00headline
The
Wireless Telephones®© &
The Smart Daaf Boys -
Products
Troy
Cory Show / DVDs VRA
TelePlay
More:
"WiTEL®©"
The
Abbreviation
For:
Wireless
Telephone - since -
1902
The
NBS
Movie
NBSLegal.net
The
WTQCA
Authority
NBS100
TELECOM
STUDY
U.S.
Regulatory
Missteps
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