Man & Machine, a Landover, Md., maker of computer peripherals, on Tuesday filed a trademark-infringement lawsuit against Apple and CBS.
The "M&M" in the filing of course refers to Man & Machine, and not the trademarked candy distributed by Mars.
Such confusion is what Man & Machine seeks to avoid. The company says that it has been selling its Mighty Mouse, "a waterproof optical mouse for medical, industrial, and marine applications," since March 2004.
Apple began selling its Mighty Mouse for computers in August 2005.
The problem with having two products named Mighty Mouse becomes clear when one googles the term (apologies in advance to Google's legal term, which has objected to the use of the search company's trademarked name as a verb): Apple's peripheral and the cartoon character for which it is named dominate the search results list. M&M's product is nowhere to be found in the first 10 pages of search results.
Practically speaking, M&M's Mighty Mouse is invisible on the Internet, though it may be less so following the publicity and "Google Juice" generated by media reports about the lawsuit. In any event, M&M clearly isn't happy with Apple's dominance of search results.
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