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  • Save the small guitar builder petition

    http://www.petitiononline.com/guitarTM/petition.html
    I feel my soul go cold... only the dead are smiling.

  • #2
    Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

    [img]/images/graemlins/wink.gif[/img]

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

      Don't know if it will do any good, but at least they will know how we feel.

      Thanks toejam for posting this.

      jacksonfan
      Are YOU a Jackson Warrior? Join us and be all that you can be!

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      • #4
        Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

        Too bad so many of these guys are posting their comments - a lot of them are total fucktards.
        I want REAL change. I want dead bodies littering the capitol.

        - Newc

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        • #5
          Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

          I see Kirk Hammet signed up as well.
          [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img] [img]/images/graemlins/scratchhead.gif[/img] [img]/images/graemlins/sick.gif[/img]

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          • #6
            Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

            I signed "yes". Yeah, I haven't spent major dough as some people (I don't have that luxury), but I think that an opinion is an opinion.

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            • #7
              Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

              Somehow I feel like I am a small part of this problem that has befallen the guitar industry here recently...

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

                [ QUOTE ]
                Somehow I feel like I am a small part of this problem that has befallen the guitar industry here recently...

                [/ QUOTE ]

                Bwhahahaha!!! [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img]


                Fong

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                • #9
                  Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

                  I signed it, who knows if it'll do any good, but like was said previous: At least they'll know how we feel. It would be nice if some non guitar owners signed it though (not that many would care [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img]), but might help the point a bit, since this could conceivably carry over into several other trademark/copyright infringement type cases too. It affects more than just us in the grand scheme of things.

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                  • #10
                    Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

                    Signed. Now I can sleep at night, hehe.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

                      Is PRS really a small maker?

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                      • #12
                        Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

                        [ QUOTE ]
                        Is PRS really a small maker?

                        [/ QUOTE ]

                        Compared to Gibson and Fender?

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

                          [ QUOTE ]
                          Somehow I feel like I am a small part of this problem that has befallen the guitar industry here recently...

                          [/ QUOTE ]
                          You ARE the problem! [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img] J/K [img]/images/graemlins/tongue.gif[/img]

                          Here's an old petition against DiMarzio to help try to lift their trademark on double creme pickups. I love DiMarzio, but I think it's ridiculous to try to prevent other manufacturers from using that color. http://www.petitiononline.com/Dimarzio/
                          I feel my soul go cold... only the dead are smiling.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Save the small guitar builder petition

                            I read that PRS is the third largest guitar manufacturer behind Gibson and Fender. Of course, I don't know if this refers to profit, number of guitars made, size of facility, etc. I assume it means profit.

                            Oh yeah, signed.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Some improvements to help-

                              <font color="red"> I think the petition could be spruced up a bit- </font>


                              As customers and members of the guitar-buying public, <font color="red"> since "customers" are different than "members" of the guitar buying public </font> we feel that any court action in enforcing 50-year old trademarks, especially when previously undefended or under-defended,<font color="red"> since I’m so familiar with Fender legal proceedings over the years </font> or recent trademarks on 50-year old designs, causes great harm <font color="red"> equal to getting poked in the eye with the tip of your drunken guitarists Rhoads </font>to the guitar-buying public <font color="red"> the members and customers we talked about a minute ago </font>.

                              We do oppose Fender’s recent attempts to trademark their body styles some 50 to 60 years after the introduction of those body styles, and decades after other builders began <font color="red"> raping the lifework of the industries founding fathers</font> issuing guitars in those styles. Our position is that to a large degree, innovation in the guitar industry necessarily consists of improvements <font color="red"> copying the hell out of </font> to existing design and the further evolution of the craft <font color="red"> copying the hell out of even more </font>as it relates to building quality stringed instruments <font color="red"> that look just like the ones from 1949 </font>.

                              In the same way that the basic design of the tire was perfected long ago, <font color="red"> like the skinny bias-ply tires on my rusted out Camaro </font> it is our <font color="red"> me and my mullet wearing buddy that ride around in my Camaro with the shitty bias-ply tires </font>position that the early innovators of the electric guitar in the 1950’s (Paul Bigsby, Leo Fender, Ted McCarty, Les Paul) created the ‘wheel’ <font color="red"> OK, this "wheel" analogy is a bit complex for the typical guitarist isn't it? </font>from which further guitar innovation flows <font color="red"> insert cliche: like a pristine mountain stream </font>. It is a recognized fact <font color="red"> by me and my buddy</font>that specific, now-trademarked designs of both Fender <font color="red"> Actually, Fender hasn't received the TM yet </font>and Gibson guitars were actually “borrowed” from Paul Bigsby’s early designs. <font color="red"> “borrowed” in quotes means stolen if you weren't swift enough to get that </font>

                              Modern builders such as Paul Reed Smith <font color="red"> Innovator </font>, Tom Anderson <font color="red"> who?</font>, John Suhr <font color="red"> sold 6 guitars</font>, Scott Lentz <font color="red"> sounds like "lint" (couldn't think of anything else)</font>, Don Grosh <font color="red"> sold 7 guitars plus it's a horrible name </font>and others <font color="red"> always gotta mention the "others" to help the chances w/ the petition </font>have succeeded as guitar builders <font color="red"> copiers </font>not because they have reinvented the wheel in a new shape <font color="red"> since they didn’t change the shape</font>. Rather success came because they <font color="red"> copied the hell out of</font> have made marked improvements to the ‘wheels’ that were previously only available through Fender and Gibson <font color="red"> So much for the innovative, original design that PRS introduced around 1985 </font>

                              Just as a piece of round rubber does not constitute a workable automobile tire, <font color="red"> I’m putting all that info. from my Logic 217 class to use – all round pieces of rubber are not tires, however, all tires are round pieces of rubber. </font> neither does a piece of wood cut into a specific shape constitute a workable, much less exceptional, guitar. <font color="red"> like my Kramer Focus Strat with the foamy beer graphic</font> Rather, it is the pursuit of advancements in technology <font color="red"> and not having to come up with a new shape that doesn’t look like ass</font>and construction while working within classic, proven designs <font color="red"> so we don’t have to spent $50 on new templates </font>that advances the science of guitar making <font color="red"> beyond the 8th grade shop project known as the Fender Strat</font>.

                              In fact, smaller builders such as PRS, Anderson, Lentz, Grosh and Suhr <font color="red"> what about the “others” so ominously mentioned earlier? </font>were able to gain their initial foothold in the market because of a drop in the quality of instruments <font color="red"> I guess Fender wasn’t able to keep the Strat shape exact enough? </font>made by Gibson and Fender. This formed a ‘quality vacuum’ <font color="red"> another concept well beyond the grasp of most people signing this petition</font> which these smaller builders filled.

                              These improvements are not always obvious to non-players. <font color="red"> or current and former members of the band WASP </font> Many of these improvements are subtle, minor tweaks to an existing design <font color="red"> like putting a 3rd horn on a Strat</font> that afford a breakthrough in tone, balance or playability. These tweaks may or may not meet the demands of the Lanham Act, <font color="red"> I had a girlfriend that used to perform the Lanham Act after a few drinks </font>but to likely customers of these high-end products, these often-minor improvements make a world of difference and greatly influence product purchase <font color="red"> while, more importantly, smashing the “quality vacuum” that so long afflicted the “customers” and “members” of the guitar buying public. </font>

                              It is our contention that eliminating smaller builders <font color="red"> blood sucking parasites</font> from the marketplace and leaving Fender and Gibson as the only builders capable of producing these classic designs will result in a lack of available alternative choices, <font color="red"> that look just like the other choices </font>a drop in the overall quality of new guitars in the marketplace, <font color="red"> maybe even leading to another "quality vacuum" </font>and an increase in price as they attain monopoly status with regard to these classic designs. <font color="red"> that people have stolen from them for years</font>

                              We <font color="red"> me and my friend Delmar </font>do understand that guitars are not limited in shape by the same physical constraints that bind a wheel to a circular shape. <font color="red"> so we really need to come up with a reason why people can still rip off someone elses design</font> However those early stringed instrument designs, as far back as Paul Bigsby in the realm of electric guitars <font color="red"> we read that in Guitar for the Practicing Musician once</font>, and indeed as far back as 17th century European violin makers <font color="red"> and “others” </font>achieved a balance, symmetry and playability that has stood the test of time <font color="red"> this is the best Del and I could do </font>

                              This test of time is proven <font color="red"> cool, we have proven that they stood the test of time </font>not only by the massive sales <font color="red"> highly descriptive technical term</font> that these designs have enjoyed, but also by the derivations and improvements <font color="red"> how many other leeches have been able to make a living off someone elses 50 year old idea </font>made to those designs by scores of builders since 1950.

                              Again, we take no position on the strictly legal merits of these cases before the courts. <font color="red"> since we really don’t understand the vastly complex field of Trademark law too much</font> As customers, <font color="red"> I’m not only the president, I’m a member </font> however, we express great concern that strict enforcement of these designs, decades after other luthiers have adopted and advanced the technology and construction of those early designs <font color="red"> that haven’t changed in 50 years </font>, will have crippling <font color="red"> massive as hell </font>effects on both the marketplace, as well as the choices available to the millions of guitar players in the United States <font color="red"> possibly making them go nooklear </font>

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