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BMW Looks at Whether Google’s Alphabet Infringes Trademark Rights

A legal dispute is unlikely since Google doesn’t plan to offer products under the Alphabet name.

AR Pictures / Shutterstock

BMW said Tuesday it was looking into whether Google infringed any trademark rights after the Silicon Valley-based firm set up a new company called Alphabet, which is also the name of a BMW subsidiary.

“We are examining whether there are any implications over trademarks,” a BMW spokeswoman said on Tuesday. The spokeswoman said there were currently no plans to take legal steps against Google.

BMW’s Alphabet, which provides services to companies with vehicle fleets, operates in 18 countries and supplies 530,000 vehicles to corporate customers.

Google was not immediately available for comment.

A legal dispute is unlikely since Google made clear in its announcement on Monday that in creating a parent company called Alphabet Inc., it was not intending to build products and brands under that name.

Google has picked a name that is also a fairly common brand among American businesses. There are currently 103 trademark registrations in the United States that include the word “alphabet” or some close variation, according to a database search of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

To prove a trademark infringement, a trademark owner would have to show that the new Alphabet created a “likelihood of confusion” among consumers between the two brands. This could occur if both brands offered similar goods and services.

(Reporting by Edward Taylor and Eric Auchard. Editing by Jane Merriman)

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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