Protected Nickname Lease

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Trademark law allows someone to trademark a name or nickname even when it does not identify the applicant. First, federal trademark law does not allow someone to trademark another person's name without permission (if at all).
Copyright protection does not extend to titles, names, slogans or short phrases, the Copyright Office has made that much very clear. You can not copyright your name, the title of your post or any short phrase that you used to identify a work.
Trademark law protects names, logos and other marks that are used in commerce. To register your name as a trademark with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), you must use it in business. But iflike most people you only use your name for personal purposes, you can't register it as a trademark.
You can not register a trademark for free. However, you can establish something known as a “common law trademark” for free, simply by opening for business. The benefit of relying on common law trademark rights is that it's free, and you don't need to do any specific work filling out forms, etc.
No, copyright protection does not exist for single words or even short phrases: see this. A word can be protected, in a certain context, by trademark. There are currently 45 “classes” for trademark protection.
Under federal trademark law, it is not possible to get a federal trademark registration from the USPTO on a mark that would be considered primarily merely a surname, or last name, unless you can establish secondary meaning (also referred to as acquired distinctiveness).
Trademarks protect the use of a company's name and its product names, its brand identity (like logos) and its slogans. Trademarks fall under the auspices of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, while Copyrights are granted by the U.S. Copyright Office.
Trademark law protects names, logos and other marks that are used in commerce. To register your name as a trademark with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), you must use it in business. In addition, you can't trademark your name if it is likely to be confused with other registered trademarks.
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