John Hasler wrote: > Angelo writes: >> It was reiterated by Mozilla that if it doesn't do this, it will lose >> some ability to protect its trademarks. IANAL, but somehow it just >> doesn't sound right to me. > > It needn't be right in order to be true. Trademark law is loony.
Actually, it's right, true, and not at all loony. Think about what a trademark is: a way to tell the buyer exactly what she's getting. If Kimberly-Clark let any old tissue maker put `Kleenex' on their box, there wouldn't be any purpose to the name, would there? So, K-C has to insist the name only be used for their product, and none other. [1] Therefore, the law simply recognizes that if things have gotten to the point where the name no longer specifies a particular maker's product, it has no use as a trademark, and therefore isn't one, and the owner loses the right to claim it as such. [2] /Therefore/, trademark owners have to do their best to keep such a thing from happening, which means not letting people call random programs ``Firefox''. And, if it's Free Software, it can easily turn into some random program, so don't do that. Debian is just the first one to hit the tripwire. Of course, why Mozilla thinks it /needs/ a trademark is another question, and one for which I can offer no answers. If Mozilla just accepted back reasonable patches, there'd be only One True Firefox, modulo a few lines of code here and there. If Joe's Browser & Storm Door Company came out with something entirely different and called it that, they'd be laughed out of business. Hmmmm, if it were Microsoft putting out the counterfeit, on the other hand.... Maybe Mozilla has a point there. -- Best wishes, Max Hyre, who took a class in this stuff several decades ago. [1] Of course, they're fighting a losing battle in the casual usage, but at least they can keep other tissue makers at bay. [2] Did you know `Zipper' used to be a trademark? And not so long ago only Merriam-Webster could call a dictionary `Webster's'? [3] Trademark law recognizes that no one's going to mistake a hawk for a handsaw, so two companies making those two separate products can both call them `Hamlet' brand, with no trademark infringement. The U.S. PTO has a whole list of different product types to help decide which are more or less non-conflicting: http://tess2.uspto.gov/netahtml/manual.html (NOTE: This is a biiiggg page: 1.2 MB, almost 2300 lines. Unless you're morbidly curious, you probably want to load just a bit and cancel the transfer.)
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature