Quote Originally Posted by rabscutle View Post
By saying "All Games Workshop products mentioned are Trademark Games Workshop" the same way after market product makers have been doing in every other industry since, ya know, ever.
Depending on how you mean that, that doesn't work. For instance, if I sell shoulder pads that are compatible with <insert GW trademark here>, I can't call them "<trademark> shoulder pads," slap a disclaimer on my shop that "<trademark> is a trademark of Games Workshop" and be done. I am still, in effect, claiming that my shoulder pads are Games Workshops'Attribution isn't a get-out-of-infringement-free card.

I can say, "shoulderpads compatible with <trademark>" because that is a factually true statement. There is really no way to make that statement without using the trademark, so the law allows me to do so. I am still technically using the trademark (I said/printed the word, logo, or whatever), but I am only doing so to make a true statement about the characteristics of my product.