A Virginia startup calling itself Operation Bluebird introduced this week that it has filed a formal petition with the US Patent and Trademark Workplace, asking the federal company to cancel X Company’s logos of the phrases “Twitter” and “tweet” since X has allegedly deserted them.
“The TWITTER and TWEET manufacturers have been eradicated from X Corp.’s merchandise, companies, and advertising, successfully abandoning the storied model, with no intention to renew use of the mark,” the petition states. “The TWITTER chicken was grounded.”
If profitable, two leaders of the group inform Ars, Operation Bluebird would launch a social community underneath the title Twitter.new, presumably as early as late subsequent yr. (Twitter.new has created a working prototype and is already inviting customers to order handles.)
Neither X Company nor its proprietor Elon Musk instantly responded to Ars Technica’s request for remark.
Michael Peroff, an Illinois legal professional and founding father of Operation Bluebird, stated that within the intervening years, extra Twitter-like social media networks have sprung up or gained traction—like Threads, Mastodon, and Bluesky. However none have the size or model recognition that Twitter did previous to Musk’s takeover.
“There actually are options,” Peroff stated. “I don’t know that any of them at this time limit are on the scale that will make a distinction within the nationwide dialog, whereas a brand new Twitter actually might.”
Equally, Peroff’s enterprise accomplice, Stephen Coates, an legal professional who previously served as Twitter’s normal counsel, stated that Operation Bluebird goals to re-create among the magic that Twitter as soon as had.
“I keep in mind a while in the past, I’ve had celebrities react to my content material on Twitter throughout the Tremendous Bowl or occasions,” he advised Ars. “And we would like that have to come back again, that entire city sq., the place we’re all meshed in there.”
May It Work?
Elon Musk bought Twitter in 2022 for $44 billion. He finally modified the corporate title and model id from Twitter to X. That call, Operation Bluebird says, created a gap for the Twitter title to be formally deserted.
In July 2023, Musk himself tweeted that “we will bid adieu to the twitter model, and step by step, all of the birds.”
That was when Peroff, a Chicago-area legal professional specializing in trademark and IP regulation, noticed a chance not solely to say the title Twitter but in addition to make use of the long-lasting illustrated emblem that was affectionately referred to internally as “Larry Fowl.”
