Losing Seattle Post-Intelligencer Will Hurt Public and Trademark Community Alike
March 15, 2009
Michael Atkins in Seattle Updates, Trademark Law Resources

The Seattle P-I: It’ll be a sad day when the printing presses stop.

This week may mark the end of the the 146 year-old Seattle Post-Intelligencer, one of two daily newspapers here. The loss of jobs — and, more importantly, the loss of viewpoints — will impoverish our city. That includes the public, business, and legal communities that have an interest in trademark issues.

We’ve been lucky to have the P-I reporting trademark news all these years. Here’s just a sampling of articles from 2009 we’re likely to miss when the paper closes its doors:

Granted, some of these stories are from the Associated Press; some were reported by The Seattle Times; and some came from the P-I’s Big Blog, which hopefully will continue even after the P-I stops printing content on paper. STL covered some of these issues, too. But the loss of the P-I adding to the mix will really hurt.

It’s a sad time for Seattleites. While we get our news — including trademark law news — from lots of sources, we’ll be poorer when those sources don’t include the P-I.

Photo credit: The Seattle Times

Update on March 16, 2009 by Registered CommenterMichael Atkins

The Seattle Times reports today that the last P-I newspaper will roll off the presses tomorrow. The P-I will attempt to publish an online version of the paper but will cut the number of its employees from 167 (almost all in the news department) to 20 or 25.

Article originally appeared on Michael Atkins (http://seattletrademarklawyer.com/).
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