"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
What they can/can't do with it depends somewhat on the classes selected for the filing. From the article:The applications cover "entertainment and education services," "toys, games and playthings" and "clothing, footwear and headwear."Keep in mind, these are filings for the mark, not assigned marks. They have a long journey ahead of them that's going to culminate with a publication in the gazzette for a while. Up through this time, other parties can contest the mark based on their prior use and you can even contest it afterwards though it's harder to do. Prior use isn't exactly easy to prove either and would require, in addition to building up "Seal Team 6" as a brand of some sort, proof of a sale across state lines. These are federal marks after all. Each party has to take this up on their own dollar and I doubt there are many out there with the bankroll to assemble a strike force of attorneys to trade blows with the whatever covert team of bloodsucking, shark-toothed lawyers Disney keeps in the their trademark enforcement regiments. Ok, back to work for me, happy Monday everyone.
But..............Imagine a team of six seals from Antartica on a quest to rid the world of a band of renegade polar bears bent on World Domination.Oh and some hijinks, pratfalls, and laughable predicaments ensue along the way.Anyone care to cast the celebrity voices?