Not sure I agree that the market isn't about feelings - how does the modder feel about someone else getting the credit i.e. money for his hard work? Try to look at it from everyone's side - not just the consumer. As GeorgeS said above.
If the cloners want to make the product better (or worse), they can - but when they take the trademark and put it on their product to make it difficult to discern from a visual perspective which is the authentic - then it can have a detrimental effect on the modder who created the device - if the product is inferior. If the product is better, why doesn't the cloner create their own branding and let it stand on its own?
This is just my opinion. I have a right to this opinion, just as you have a right to your opinion.
Unlike Ricks, if you can make a compelling argument that the clone market should be able to copy a device - along with the trademark, please respond - I am willing to listen. I, at the moment, can't imagine an argument that would be compelling, but feel free to surprise me.
Best Regards,
F2V
I'll toss my $0.02 in and be done with it.
In my humble opinion there is protected IP and then there is everything else. "IP" is not automagically protected, if I designed, built and started selling "a better mouse trap" out of my garage and my next door neighbor decides to steal my idea, under cut my pricing and begin selling the exact same thing (with the same name and logo, exc.) on it, I better have:
otherwise (in many countries including the USA) while what my neighbor is doing could be considered morally wrong, it may not be legally wrong.
- registered my logos, product names, company name, exc. as Trademarks
- have my "better mouse trap" patented
- defend my IP
In the USA the FTC goes to great lengths to inspect products entering it and are sold in it to ensure that counterfit products are not bought and sold here.
The "catch" is that the ("better mouse trap" in my case) needs to have patent, copyright and trademark registration to be protected IP otherwise it falls into the "everything else" bucket. Even with the mentioned protections in place, if my neighbor changes the design by a given percentage, (making his design while obviously based on mine, a "new idea") I won't have a leg to stand on in court.
I often wondered if many of the Chinese "clones" were ether factory 2nds that the workers started selling on their own, "extra production run" where the workers keep producing product beyond what the OEM order called for or if there was some under/above ground network of workers who traded the drawings/files needed to create other peoples products and enlisted other factories to make production runs of it as if it was their own.
If the cloners want to make the product better (or worse), they can - but when they take the trademark and put it on their product to make it difficult to discern from a visual perspective which is the authentic - then it can have a detrimental effect on the modder who created the device - if the product is inferior. If the product is better, why doesn't the cloner create their own branding and let it stand on its own?
This is just my opinion. I have a right to this opinion, just as you have a right to your opinion.
Every clone I have bought has worked great. I just can't buy authentic for the prices they want. The KF4 was almost $200. I bought 3 Tobecos for $53. I'd rather save my money and buy several clones and enjoy vaping even more. Buying Clones also allows me to keep my kids happy with their Xboxes and icraps, I mean iPhones. I prefer Android.
And if that bothers some people, keep it to yourself! You won't change how I feel.
Unlike Ricks, if you can make a compelling argument that the clone market should be able to copy a device - along with the trademark, please respond - I am willing to listen. I, at the moment, can't imagine an argument that would be compelling, but feel free to surprise me.
Best Regards,
F2V