He sprays foam building insulation; she makes soap.
But Rob Linden and Amy Brooks have one issue in common. They're ensnared in a practice some attorneys call "trademark bullying." Both are fighting against big, deep-pocketed corporations over the use of their hand-selected names for their small businesses.
High-profile trademark disputes, such as the long-running litigation between Apple Corps (owner of the Beatles Apple Records label) and Apple Computer (of Macintosh and iPod fame) often pit big businesses against one another. But it can be a life-or-death contest when the defendant is a small company.
For the past four years, Linden has run a small Columbia Heights business called Thermal-Wise Insulation that provides insulation services to commercial and residential customers.
Brooks, of Rochester, sells handcrafted soaps that are designed to reduce skin irritation to cancer patients as they go through therapy. A cancer survivor herself, Brooks has been selling soap under the name Bubbles by Brooks for 10 years.
These days Linden is the target of a lawsuit brought by a Utah-based natural gas utility that claims the name of Linden's company infringes on the name of a rebate program it offers its customers, ThermWise.
Brooks is the subject of a trademark objection by Brooks Brothers, the giant Connecticut-based clothier which also has a line of fragrances and self-described "cleansing products." Brooks Brothers wants Bubbles by Brooks to withdraw its trademark application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office or face "potentially costly litigation."
The legal challenges have left both Linden and Brooks dumbfounded.