Dick family take legal action against Google Nexus One name
By Martin James,
The family of late sci-fi author Philip K Dick plan to take legal action against Google for the naming of its just-unveiled Nexus One smartphone.
According to the family, the name references the Nexus-6 replicants from Dick's 1968 novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, which formed the foundation of the 1982 film Blade Runner.
Given that the Nexus One runs Google's operating system with the similarly sci-fi-flavoured name Android, the author's estate argues that the link is obvious.
Indeed, when the name first became public knowledge last month, there were immediate rumours of discontent from the late author's family, with Dick's daughter – Isa Dick Hackett – particularly miffed.
Hackett is the chief executive of Electric Shepherd Productions, part of Dick's estate tasked with adapting his works. The author died in 1982 having written 36 novels and in excess of 100 published short stories.
“Google takes first and then deals with the fallout later,” Hackett told Wired.com earlier this week. “In my mind, there is a very obvious connection to my father’s novel.
“Our legal team is dealing head-on with this,” she promised.
Google has thus far declined to comment on the record, though some attorneys with experience of trademark disputes say it will be hard to prove that consumers will be confused between the two concepts – a cornerstone of most successful cases.
“Will people buying the Google phone hear the Nexus One name and think that is just like in Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?” speculated Marc Reiner, a partner at Dorsey & Whitney LLP, to the Wall Street Journal. “A character in a book does not automatically get trademark protection.”
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alan.g.ainsworth@googlemail.com
According to my Shorter Oxford English Dictionary 3rd Edition "Nexus" means connection and has reference to first usage in 1663. Hard for the family to make a case for a word in common usage for iover 300 years.
From the same source "Android" is referenced as first used in 1727.
I'm sure, though, if the Dick family were to bring this to England our outrageous libel laws would get them satisfaction.
By EdgeCarver on Tuesday Jan 12
Just plain stupid
What are they thinking? So what if it's a reference to Dick's novel? They don't hold a trademark on the names Nexus One or Android, and plagiarism doesn't apply either, so what legal theory are they acting on? Whatever it is, I'm sure no court will uphold it. Fools to waste their money on such nonsense.
By greenknight32 on Tuesday Jan 12
Free marketing
They are not actually spending any money. They are just getting some free advertising.
By GrahamMills on Tuesday Jan 12