Atari controlled it beginning in 1973, but protection expired and was not renewed. They then filed a new registration in 2008.
In 2006, a company selling cups for beer pong trademarked a logo of the word "pong" in all caps with the O inside a cup.
In 2009, the Pong Research Corporation of Virginia registered a logo of the word "pong" in lower case with a small chevron above the O, for use in the field of redirection of radio frequency emissions.
Ping-Pong is a federally registered trademark first developed by Parker Brothers, Inc. and now owned by Escalade Sports. So the registered trademark Ping-Pong indicates a brand of equipment used to play the sport of table tennis. America's brand for table tennis equipment since 1901 There are several other manufacturers of table tennis tables, but only one genuine Ping-Pong brand of table tennis tables and equipment.
The UNIX trademark is owned by The Open Group.
James A. Wahl of Minneapolis now owns the trademark.
Ping-Pong is a federally registered trademark in the USA and is owned by Escalade Sports.
PHILIPS
It depends on who owns the trademark (you or someone else), the nature of the copyrighted work, and how you're using the trademark in the work.
It's a publicly traded corperation that owns its own trademark.
Seasons Lost is a metal band from South Florida and they own the trademark to that name.
Nobody owns the copyright of a single word. Perhaps you mean trademark.
Michael Tabor and Susan Magnier own the Rip Van Winkle trademark.
Ping-Pong is a USA registered trademark, first developed in the early 1900s by Parker Brothers Inc., and it is now owned by Escalade Sports. Therefore the registered trademark "Ping-Pong" indicates a brand of equipment used to play the sport of table tennis. Ping-Pong is the brand and table tennis is the sport. However, in many places the names are still used interchangeably.
Parker Brothers