Home / Software & Gaming / EA and Ubisoft butting heads over ‘Ghost’ trademark

EA and Ubisoft butting heads over ‘Ghost’ trademark

Ubisoft and EA are currently having a bit of a legal squabble over a trademark to the word ‘Ghost'. EA applied to trademark the word last year for its Ghost Games studio, which works on Need for Speed. However, Ubisoft isn't too fond of this as the publisher believes it conflicts with its own trademark for Ghost Recon, which it has been using since 2001.

EA filed for the Ghost trademark in March last year and it was first opposed by Ubisoft back in August. However, legal action was finally filed on the 29th of January this year, with Ubisoft's lawyers arguing that the Ghost Recon trademark has been in use since 2001, long before EA started using the word in relation to Ghost Games and before EA's own trademark was filed.

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The legal filing centers around the potential for confusion surrounding EA's use of the word Ghost and Ubisoft's own Ghost Recon trademark, since in both cases the word would be applied to games and online services.

However this pans out, it is unlikely that EA will rebrand Ghost Games under a different name. Instead, it may just end up abandoning its attempt to trademark the name. EA ran into a similar situation recently with the upcoming indie game ‘Unravel', the game's name isn't changing but EA did abandon the trademark after confliction with a children's board game.

KitGuru Says: I don't really think many people would confuse Ghost Games the EA studio with Ghost Recon the Ubisoft game series but it seems that lawyers don't agree. What do you guys think of this? 

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9 comments

  1. Lawyers never agree, because they are paid not to agree with common sense.

  2. Gary 'Gazza' Keen

    and suddenly Activision slams open the door “WAIT! One of our published games has the word Ghosts in it, we own this shit!”

  3. Anyone attempting trade single words should receive a resounding slap to the face. People will have to start making up new words to call their games as all the English language ones will be reserved.

  4. This is what the endless DLC pays for.

  5. I sentence both idiots to pay all Tumblr Ghostkins.

  6. I’m inclined to add that the one who accepted the trademark of a single common word be fired and pay for damages

  7. I want to trademark “The”. Think of all “the” money I would make. 😀

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  9. An easily solvable problem. Ghost Games should’ve been trademarked, not the word “Ghost” alone xD