most likely.
These designations indicate that a person claims rights in a particular trademark or service mark. They do not indicate that the mark has been registered. Even though a mark is not registered, a person claiming ownership may place the "TM" or "SM" designation next to it
Legal definition: The symbol (SM) is used to indicate that a word, phrase, logo or design is treated as a service mark by the party - that is, that the party claims rights in the mark. The mark does not need to be federally registered to use this symbol, unlike the ® symbol.
Trademark Slogan mark registered trademark
Service mark
I have seem SM used in replacement of TM for a trademark identifier, what does sm stand for? it stands for "service mark"
Legal definition: The symbol (SM) is used to indicate that a word, phrase, logo or design is treated as a service mark by the party - that is, that the party claims rights in the mark. The mark does not need to be federally registered to use this symbol, unlike the ® symbol.
I believe it stands for Service Mark.. ?
type & # 8480 ; without spaces ~Teddybuoy
Strictly speaking, TM indicates the protected mark is for goods, and SM indicates it is for a service. (A fancy mop would be TM, and a cleaning company would be SM.) In practice, TM is often used on goods and services.
NO! A product is different from service. An example of product is Milk, Mobile phone, TV, Car, etc. An example of service is insurance, medical care (but medicine is product), etc. The government marks use for service is SM, which stands for service mark, while for product it is TM, which stands for Trademark.
Answer 1 simply magic Answer 2 Service Mark - see link Answer 3 S&M - SadoMasochistic
Westinghouse DigitalPart # SM-LTV32W6HDSERVICE MANUAL