Skip to main content

Tesla panic-files ‘Cybercar’ and ‘Cybervehicle’ trademarks moments after Musk says them

Tesla filed two new trademark applications within 37 seconds of each other last night, moments after Elon Musk used the terms on the company’s Q4 2025 earnings call. It follows Tesla having issues securing the ‘Cybercab’ trademark because of its own tardiness again.

Welcome to Tesla’s new trademark strategy: panic-filing in real time.

The filings

According to USPTO records obtained by Electrek, Tesla filed for two new trademarks on January 28, 2026:

MarkSerial NumberFiling Time (ET)
CYBERCAR996207477:32:54 PM
CYBERVEHICLE996207497:33:31 PM

That’s 37 seconds apart.

Advertisement - scroll for more content

Tesla’s Q4 2025 earnings call began at 5:30 PM ET yesterday. By the time these filings hit the USPTO at 7:32-7:33 PM, the call had just wrapped up.

During the call, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said this:

Because that implies that the CyberCab, which is a dedicated two-seater dedicated robo taxi, is a little confusing with the terms robo taxi and CyberCab. Sorry about the confusion. In fact, in some states, we’re not allowed to use the word cab or taxi, so it’s going to get even more strange. It’s going to be like Cybervehicle or something Cybercar. But the CyberCab, which is a specific model that we’re making, does not have a steering wheel or pedals.

The implication is clear: Tesla’s legal team was listening to the earnings call, and the moment Musk uttered new product terminology, they raced to file before anyone else could.

Learned the hard way

This appears to be Tesla’s response to the embarrassing “Cybercab” trademark situation we reported on earlier this month.

Here’s what happened with Cybercab:

  • October 10, 2024: Musk unveils “Cybercab” at Tesla’s “We, Robot” event
  • October 28, 2024: A French beverage company called Unibev files for the “Cybercab” trademark
  • November 2024: Tesla finally gets around to filing its own application
  • November 2025: USPTO suspends Tesla’s application, giving priority to Unibev

Because Tesla announced the name publicly before filing the trademark, squatters had a window to beat them to the punch. A seltzer company now has priority over Tesla for the name of its flagship autonomous vehicle.

Tesla also failed to secure “Robotaxi” because the USPTO deemed it too generic.

So now Tesla is stuck: “Robotaxi” is too generic to own, and “Cybercab” is blocked by a company that makes hard seltzer.

Last night’s filings suggest Tesla has learned its lesson, sort of.

Instead of filing trademarks before Musk announces things publicly (the obvious solution), Tesla appears to have rushed lawyers to file applications after Musk said it on a public call.

It’s reactive instead of proactive, but at least it’s fast.

The question now is whether “Cybercar” and “Cybervehicle” will face the same challenges. Given that Tesla already has “Cybertruck” registered, these applications might have an easier path, though the USPTO has previously scrutinized Tesla’s “Cyber” prefix applications.

Electrek’s Take

Top comment by Damon Ekstrom

Liked by 22 people

As the saying goes, "the monkeys run the asylum". With the board catering to Musk's every whim, we're seeing the downfall of Tesla in real time.

1) It started with Musk entering into politics, which turned Tesla into a political statement.

2) Then we saw the disastrous launch of the Cybertruck instead of the "model 2" that Musk should've focused on instead, as it would've been far more successful.

3) Musk then mandated that Tesla is now an AI/Robotics company, despite not achieving full autonomy in the last decade, even though Musk promised for several years that it's coming "next year".

4) Musk is now removing Autopilot from appearing in new vehicles going forward, despite lane keeping existing in almost every possible modern vehicle that you can get in 2026. The only way to get it now is to pay $100/mo for FSD.

5) Now Musk has killed the Model S and Model X, leaving the Model 3 and Y the only vehicles they have left. (Cybertruck will soon follow given it's sales numbers.)

I don't know what the future of Tesla is going to look like, but it's looking mighty bleak.

View all comments

I genuinely cannot believe this is how a company worth hundreds of billions of dollars handles trademark strategy.

The normal process is simple: you decide on product names internally, file the trademarks, and then announce them publicly. Apple does this. Every major automaker does this. It’s corporate 101.

Tesla’s process appears to be: Musk says whatever comes to mind on a public call, and lawyers scramble to file paperwork before opportunists can beat them to the USPTO.

The fact that Tesla filed two trademarks 37 seconds apart, right as the earnings call was ending, tells you everything you need to know about how this company operates. There’s no coordinated product naming strategy. There’s just Musk improvising and everyone else reacting.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Stay up to date with the latest content by subscribing to Electrek on Google News. You’re reading Electrek— experts who break news about Tesla, electric vehicles, and green energy, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow Electrek on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our YouTube channel for the latest reviews.

Comments

Author

Avatar for Fred Lambert Fred Lambert

Fred is the Editor in Chief and Main Writer at Electrek.

You can send tips on Twitter (DMs open) or via email: fred@9to5mac.com

Through Zalkon.com, you can check out Fred’s portfolio and get monthly green stock investment ideas.