2much2spend
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 27/6/11
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- 460
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maybe an american brown then!
Is Thunder road available through the likes of Dans?
Hate to sound like a naysayer but i tend to agree with the spokesperson from CUB. Taking someone else's intellectual property (even if its just a TM name) and reviving a product under the false pretence that it is the beer that was produced several decades ago now by another brewery for profit is pretty sneaky.
I disagree. Trademarks are a particular form of words deployed for a particular purpose, they are a tool but they aren't unique like a patent. If the use stops then they revert to just being a collection of words without any inherent purpose and are thus available to be put to use by someone else. As to it being a wake up call to CUB, I saw some figures on market share the other day and craftbrews aren't in sight. Top of the list was XXXX Gold followed closely by VB. In fact Corona was the only non-local swill in the list. Beer consumption is apparently shrinking but that just means people are drinking less crap beer than they used to but they still prefer crap beer.Hate to sound like a naysayer but i tend to agree with the spokesperson from CUB. Taking someone else's intellectual property (even if its just a TM name) and reviving a product under the false pretence that it is the beer that was produced several decades ago now by another brewery for profit is pretty sneaky.
The only benefit I can see coming out of this is CUB wake up to the direction beer is heading in this country treat these historical brands with some dignity and try and push historical examples out as seasonal releases every now and then. Rather than relabelling a slightly adjusted (or not at all) recipe of VB as Ballarat Bitter etc.
Unless the new TM holders have access to the recipes and have the ability to reproduce a historically accurate example of that beer, "let sleeping dogs lie" IMO.
The idea of taking CUB's TM to protect it as an Australian 'identity' is utter rubbish. Especially when its being taken up by another profitable organisation. If it was secured by a not for profit or a craft brewers association ran by a collection of industry people for the industry it would sit better with me.
Rather than injecting money into taking CUB's brands, why are they not focusing further on getting their 6 million dollar investment off the ground? With an investment that grand, I'd be wanting to make a little more headway than what they currently have since launch.
History still exists regardless of how this court thing works out, though.I think it maybe that he has a passion for beer history!
I'd have to agree here, as the article only talk about the names not about the actual beers. I get no indication that Thunder Road have any intention of actually brewing of these beers. As the recipes if still available would be more about IP rather then TM. Without IP/recipe you'd be only guessing what these pre War beers were like, not reproducing the original beers.Are they trying to remove the trademark so the beers are available to everyone or just so they can brew them themselves?
My limited understanding from that limited article is that 'winning' the court case won't mean transferral of the TM etc to Thunder Road - just that SAB Miller won't be able to hang onto it exclusively.
Public domain.
There is effectively no difference between what this guy is trying to do, and what Fosters/Lion Nathan do with BUL.
BUL beers are brand names, and nothing more. I don't understand why this guy is even bothering trying to unearth brands that will mean nothing to most beer drinkers, but for CUB to say what they did is hypocrisy at its finest.
In all honesty, can anyone work out why Thunder Road is preferring to put money into this instead of developing good beers of their own?
Not saying they don't have any good beers but if they want more beers then money will help with that.
This is not anything like a BUL project. BUL is contracting a 3rd party to produce their product in another geographical location to ensure the quality and cost of their product is available globally and is not compromised by the effect of shipping their product 1/2 way around the globe. There is no reference here that CUB would ever entertain the idea of someone else producing one of these product under its name either.
The whole issue i have is its about taking trade marks, rightfully owned by CUB upon the formation of the organisation and taking these product name away from them. For what exactly? Some cowboy feels that they don't deserve to hold onto their historical identity? Give me a break. Its effectively sealing someone's history and telling them they no longer have the right up uphold their heritage and produce.
I'm sure in 50 years time if Thunder Road still exist and no longer produce their coveted "Pale Lager" they wouldn't want others doing the same. I guarantee it.
This is the real question i have. All i have ever seen is smoke and mirrors with these guys. For an organisation trying to look like the Stone Brewing equivalent for Australia, their doing a pretty average job of it so far.
I dont know much about Stone Brewing's philosophy but a quick look at their beers makes me think their philosophy is very different. Thunder road are trying to gain a share of the big boys markets by producing approachable beers that are fresh and tasty all malt etc
I'm taking about the underlying 'i don't give a **** what anyone thinks' arrogant bastard brand approach they have seem to have had since day dot. (Not all stones products/enterprises follow this philosophy).
This is not anything like a BUL project. BUL is contracting a 3rd party to produce their product in another geographical location to ensure the quality and cost of their product is available globally and is not compromised by the effect of shipping their product 1/2 way around the globe.
That is indeed what a BUL project is supposed to be.
Which is why called what Fosters/Swan/Coopers/etc. BUL is technically wrong. They are not the same recipes. I believe Coca Cola event admitted to it when they lost their SABMiller contracts.
What would be great is that CUB brewed these beers and put them on tap on places they owned. Why not create CUB Taverns (with the pubs they already own) branded against James Squire Ale Houses, etc.
The new world is about choice, price and accessibility. If you can't accommodate these fundamentals then you are unlikely to succeed and/or survive.
My $0.02
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