1 in 9 Companies Sign Linux Trademark Letter 181
An anonymous reader writes "More than 10 percent of the 90-odd organisations which received a letter asking them to relinquish any legal claim to the 'Linux' name have agreed to do so. Jeremy Malcolm, the lawyer who's leading the charge on behalf of Linux Mark Institute, described the response and favorable, saying: "Not all of the recipients were using Linux as part of their business of product/service names. He added that one of the purposes of sending the letter out in the first place was to discern which organisations might use the name for commercial gain."
And the majority, you know the 90%.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:And the majority, you know the 90%.... (Score:2, Insightful)
"Not all of the recipients were using Linux as part of their business of product/service names."
Legal spamming (Score:2)
It should be, and if they only selected 90 recipients anyway, it shouldn't have been too much work screening them manually before mailing them. In any case, it would have been less work than what they tricked 80 mistaken recipients to do for them, unpaid. One trained lawyer can probably screen each recipient's website in less than two minutes, while 80 non-lawyers are likely to spend more than five minutes on average reading the legal notice and contemplating whether they may be infringing.
If I'll ever rec
Re:And the majority, you know the 90%.... (Score:2)
Man, time flies (Score:2, Insightful)
Now, almost a decade later and the technology is progressing at a rapid pace and people everywhere are loading it up on their systems. I guess there really wasn't any other way for the system to evolve except into a bureaucracy. It's sad in a way.
What is sad is that it's no longer about the code. It's all about who owns what and w
Re:Man, time flies (Score:3, Insightful)
Almost a decade and a half [google.com] later, I think you mean. :)
"Butthead Astronomer" (Score:5, Funny)
Then they changed it to "Butthead Astronomer": http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Sagan [wikipedia.org]
I think it was more than iritation... (Score:1)
Sagan was also sick at the time and I'm sure he was protecting a legacy for his family and his other interests that depended on his name being worth something. Just my guess.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I think it was more than iritation... (Score:2)
Re:"Butthead Astronomer" (Score:2, Funny)
But only after "Let It Beep" was rejected.
Re:"Butthead Astronomer" (Score:5, Informative)
When Apple called a project "Sagan", the astronomer got irritated, and told them to cease and desist. Then they changed it to "Butthead Astronomer": http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Sagan [wikipedia.org]
This is pretty funny. What you guys might've missed in the Wikipedia article is that Sagan actually sued to have the project's name changed, and lost. Apple changed it to Butthead Astronomer anyway, which prompted Sagan to sue again, for libel. He lost again, but Apple changed the project name one more time, to "LAW", which stood for "Lawyers Are Wimps". :)
If every lawsuit was this amusing, perhaps the legal world wouldn't be so sickening.
Re:"Butthead Astronomer" (Score:3, Insightful)
The codename was for one of the first power macintosh desktops (the 7100/66).
Given that the other two projects were called Piltdown Man (6100/60) and Cold Fusion (8100/80). Given that one was a deliberate scientific hoax and the other a famously premature and wrong press release, Sagan was actually being quite reasonable. Would you like that company?
It's also worth noting t
Re:"Butthead Astronomer" (Score:2)
Not to mention that if you read the scenarios it was based on, the scenarios were entirely unrealistic vis-a-vis the way a nuclear war would actually be conducted.
It was like the oft-stated notion that there are enough nuclear weapons to destroy all life on the planet - yeah, if you space them evenly around the globe, which would never happen in any real war. In a real war, ninety percent of the
Re:"Butthead Astronomer" (Score:2)
Perhaps the same group who think global warming is just a theory? Or that ozone layer depletion couldn't possibly happen? Maybe the scientists who don't think cigarette smoking has any causal relationship to lung cancer?
The critiques I have seen of "Nuclear Winter" (and there were plenty) were arguments at the margins about the assumptions fed into the climate models or their granularity (and in
Re:"Butthead Astronomer" (Score:2)
The assertion is based on the simple fact that if the US hit Russia first, Russia's weapons (except for submarines) would be toast. If Russia hit the US first, all of the US's SECOND-STRIKE weapons would be toast (unless our ABM defenses proved extremely effective, which is doubt
Re:"Butthead Astronomer" (Score:2)
9 in 10 didn't... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yesterday was gamespot (Score:2)
Now two zdnet stories in a row. Nice way of avoiding dupes!
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Free as in ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Is it just me, or is FreeBSD is starting to look pretty good right now from an ideological point of view? Pulling out lawyers is an awfully Microsoft-ish/SCO-ish thing to do.
Re:Free as in ... (Score:3)
This is not unlike you making your own Version of the Firefox browser and calling it LellorFireFox. Despite the code being open source, the name and graphics are often not, so you would need to change both sufficiently to have it truly be your own version (despite OSS implications).
Re:Free as in ... (Score:1)
I understand where you're coming from, but where do you draw the line?
If a company advertises custom-built Linux firewalls / intranet servers / or whatever and uses Linux logos and graphics, is that not acceptable?
Yet Linux distributions often use these trademarked terms and figuroos without any legal action taken against them.
if it's only about companies using the terms and figuroos for things which clearly are not Linux-based or have anything to do with Linux, perhaps it's more understandable, but h
Re:Free as in ... (Score:3, Insightful)
I think you'll find it's something that Linus himself would rather not do and has no interest in doing - but the way the trademark "system" works is that you have to make a reasonable pretense of defending your trademark (from unlicensed use) or you lose it. It's quite different to other sorts of intellectual property concepts like patents or copyright.
And that's really all there is to it. If you mus
Re:Free as in ... (Score:1)
What I'm concerned about is that the trademark law could be wangled into allowing the LMI to manipulate and dominate the Linux computing world, and injure Linux and the Free/Open source movement in general by giving it a bad rep and creating animosity between the LMI and companies building their products with or on top of Linux.
Of course it would be nice not to blame Linus or the lawyers involved or anything like
Re:Free as in ... (Score:2)
Linus was likely advised by a lawyer
Re:Free as in ... (Score:1)
No, that's not the reason I find it uncharacteristic of him. I find it uncharacteristic of him because I thought he had more common sense than to go along with something like this - it is a slippery slope.
your sig (Score:2)
if not, you show the same level of understanding there as you do of trademark law: little-to-none.
sum.zero
Re:your sig (Score:2)
Re:Free as in ... (Score:5, Informative)
AFAIK you can't just go out and call your product FreeBSD coffee, or whatever. The FreeBSD foundation owns the trademark.
I know for a fact that the NetBSD foundation has been clamping down on people using the NetBSD name in their products without authorisation.
I don't see how Linus's actions are any different from this.
Re:Free as in ... (Score:1)
Ok, I'll grant you that.
What about systems, though? Let's draw up a scenario so that we're both on the same page. Company XYZ is a computer vendor, the CEO, Miss F, has decided that the company should take the Linux route since she has experienced Linux as being a very reliable and powerful system. The company produces Linux servers and desktops, and advertises them as such.
Does Miss F get a letter from LMI demanding a license fee for each system her company sells, or some sort of global sublicensing fee?
Re:Free as in ... (Score:2, Interesting)
What the heck are you smoking? How do you get from the effort that is required by statute and common law to defend a trademark to "will the LMI be extracting vast tribute from Linux vendors, and blackmailing them a-la Microsoft?"
What is really scary to me is that there is this kneejerk reaction that if an organization does anything at all to protect "intellectual property" -- a horrid term but one that I think actually does apply to trademarks because someone else using your trademarks can lessen the valu
Re:Free as in ... (Score:3, Informative)
SuSE Linux Enterprise Server ?
ok, let's call it SuSE Enterprise Server, and list Linux as its kernel, on the side of the box.
You say that maybe you don't get enough recognition (> money ) without using th "Linux" trademark ? ok, you can always pay for it, or probably get it for "free", in exchange of some developers.
_If_ the name "Linux" is a revenue-generating part of your name, it's not that crazy that y
FreeBSD®, NetBSD®, Linux® (Score:2)
FreeBSD is a registered trademark of The FreeBSD Foundation.
"NETBSD" is a registered trademark of The NetBSD Foundation.
Linux® is the registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the U.S. and other countries.
Re:Free as in ... (Score:2)
Re:Free as in ... (Score:2)
Do a Google. Read previous
Get a clue.
Start with this [freebsdfoundation.org]:
The FreeBSD Foundation acquires the FreeBSD Trademark
The FreeBSD Foundation is pleased to announce the acquisition of
the FreeBSD trademark.
In October of last year, Wind River Inc. agreed to assign the
FreeBSD trademark to
Strategy (Score:1)
Strange thing to do (Score:5, Interesting)
quote:
"Not all of the recipients were using Linux as part of their business of product/service names," he said, adding that one of the purposes of sending the letter out in the first place was to discern which organisations might use the name for commercial gain.
I am all for protecting the Linux trademark, and I (think I) understand the reasons behind it. However, I feel that LMI should really be sure that the when they send out threatening letters, the recipients ARE using Linux as part of their business/product name. Their strategy seems like harassment.
Re:Strange thing to do (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Strange thing to do (Score:1)
Short answer: Past experience. ;-)
Long answer:
I actually think that no matter how informative and polite a letter from a lawyer is, there is always some amount of threat in it. The fact that some lawyer sends you a letter is a rather good indication that you and/or your actions has been in somebody's searchlight, which is never a good feeling. And, IMHO, lawyers ARE aware of this, and should be considerate, especially if they represent a good-will organisation, such as LMI.
Forecast (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Forecast (Score:1)
Re:Forecast (Score:2)
Re:Forecast (Score:2)
Re:Forecast (Score:2)
The Linux trademark is owned by the "LINUX MARK INSTITUTE", a non-profit organisation who protect it. They cannot sell it to MS or anyone else.
Trademark == reputation (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not saying that the Linux Mark Institute is doing this, but it is what they should do as part of the Linux maturation process.
Re:Trademark == reputation (Score:2, Insightful)
The fluffy ideal that so many try their very best to uphold is that if you mix enough intellect, enthusiasm and good nature together for long enough, something beautiful will result.
Suggesting that the mix then requires a high degree of control significantly detracts from this ideal.
Either Linux Mark Institute believes in the ideal, in which case truth, justice and the American way will bring about a
Trademark control is a prerequisite for integrity (Score:3, Informative)
The fluffy ideal that so many try their very best to uphold is that if you mix enough intellect, enthusiasm and good nature together for long enough, something beautiful will result.
Agreed on both counts. But if Linux becomes a popular OS, then it will attract some less fluffy personalities who only see it as a quick way to make a buck. If this idealistic group has no mechanism for ejecting/co
Re:Trademark == reputation (Score:2)
Bzzt. wrong. Free/Open software is about not controlling what somebody does with the software. FSF still owns Emacs. In fact they asked author of XEmacs to sign the copywrite over to them.
GPL and other Free licenses are not about ownership, the original author still retains ownership of the original work and name. The philosophy is not about surrenduring your rights as the author, its about gr
Re:Trademark == reputation (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't hear anyone claiming the Open group is making a ton of money off the trademark of UNIX. I'd say your comment is dead on and the recent Linux trademark efforts are highly similar to the UNIX trademark issues.
Preserving the good name
Re:Trademark == reputation (Score:1)
Baloney. This is being done primarily because the large vendors want Linux®, not Linux generic. "Protecting the good name of Linux" is just the sugar coating used to get the sheep to swallow it.
The lawyer says "one of the purposes of sending the letter out in the first place was to discern which organisations might use the name for commercial gain." That means he was trolling for people/organizations to possibly sue in the future. R
Re:Trademark == reputation (Score:2)
Note this is from 2000, and it was Slashdotted [slashdot.org]
If you don't like the trademark thing (which grew out of misue of the Linux name), fork.
Re:Trademark == reputation (Score:2)
Changes:
You sign a contract for a specific jouristiction. Last I heard worldwide contracts are not the norm, and if you read your own source "it is not possible to simply create a worldwide trademark license" (LWN).
A new clause for being in breech of the contract. It gives permission to seek relief for a breech, and a timeline for fixing it. You mean LMI can ask someone to play nice and not be snubbed as a result? The bastards!
*This is the "money grubbing" part, s
Re:Trademark == reputation (Score:2, Informative)
Good, because they aren't. The sublicense agreement only gives LMI the right to terminate if the sublicensee starts using the mark with unauthorized goods/services (something completely unrelated to Linux), or if they violate the agreement in another way.
The agreement doesn't give LMI the right to terminate just because the sublicensee smeared Linux's name. LMI cannot hold the company to any standards, codes of conduct, etc.
Ratios? (Score:1)
Good trick though.
Re:Ratios? (Score:4, Informative)
1 in 9 is 11.11%, which is more than 10%. I don't see the inconsistency here?
In fact, 10% of 90 organizations would be 9.(yes, I realize it says 90-odd, but still)
More than 9 would imply at least 10 organizations. 10 out of 90-odd is about 1 in 9.
Other way around? (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally, I think the bigger news is that just under 90% of the 90-odd organisations that received a letter have not responded to requests to relinquish any legal claim to the 'Linux' name.
In other words, 80 of those companies may attempt to assert a legal claim to the 'Linux' name now or in the future. This is a hell of a bigger volume (and worry) than the 10 that said they wouldn't.
Finally, if not all of them were using the 'Linux' name in their business/product/service name - what exactly was the point in sending them this letter? So they could ignore it?
Re:Other way around? (Score:2)
They have the right to remain silent... (Score:2)
That's not news at all. No businessman in his right mind agrees to any legal terms without running it past his lawyers first. A business of any size at all has a legal department whose main job is reviewing documents to be sure they aren't booby-trapped.
The question you have to ask is what benefit these people se
Re:Other way around? (Score:2)
I think you're using a rhetorical gesture that's kind of a logical fallacy--not quite, but sort o. To wit, the fact that I haven't signed the letter means that I may attempt to assert a legal claim to the Linux name now of in the future. What of it?
When a company receives a letter like that, there dozens of perfectly good reasons not to sign it that don't spring from intentions to use Linux a
Trademarks must be defended (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.fool.com/portfolios/rulemaker/2000/rul
I still think it's already too late. (Score:3, Interesting)
"Please Xerox this for me."
Two examples of how trademarks have made it into common speech. "Linux" made it even faster, since it has been an all-encompassing term for a collection of software for years. "Linux" is only the kernel; a small fraction of the software that comes on distributions that include the name "Linux:" Red Hat Linux, Debian Linux, Suse Linux, Mandrake (Mandriva) Linux, Damn Small Linux, etc. The majority of the software on these distros is true "third-party" software, and the next largest category is the GNU "glue" that holds it all together. The kernel is way down the line, here.
Torvalds is likely to do for "GNU/Linux" what Stallman never could: get people to start calling the OS after something other than just the kernel.
After all, how should we divide up credit among developers of all this software? People balked at calling it "GNU/Linux," but at this rate, GNU sounds a hell of a lot better than GNU/Linux/Apache/GIMP/OSS/KDE/Gnome/Enlightenment
Be careful, Linus...be careful what you wish for.
Re:I still think it's already too late. (Score:2)
"Have an apple."
So, what is your point? Kleenex and Xerox may be commonly used, but so are Kool-Aid and Bandaid. ALL are still trademarked by there respective owners.
Re:I still think it's already too late. (Score:2)
Why don't we just have two distros, GNOME and KDE, compatible with each other (by installing the other's libraries), and both running on the Linux kernel? "Desktop Enviro
Re:I still think it's already too late. (Score:2)
Right, so start selling tissues that say "Kleenex" on the side of the box, and see what happens; you'll get sued and lose. Sell "Biily-Bobs nifto dispenser full of Kleenex", and no problem, as long as the tissues inside are actual Kleenex.
People will go right on calling it Linux, and Linus will let them, and he couldn't necessarily stop them if he wanted to. If he defends the trademark, he can, and presumably will, stop companies from calling something Linux which is not.
No significant number are going to
Unix does this, so why not Linux? (Score:3, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)
Re:So how many? (Score:2)
If it were Windows-related, they would say "less than 15 percent", making it out to be a bad thing.
Captian! She canna handle the spin! (Score:2, Informative)
Oh wait. That means that somewhere in the neighborhood of ninety percent didn't? Well, if ten is bigger than nine then it must be bigger than ninety too.
payback? (Score:3, Interesting)
why not? i'd pay samba too for the use of their trademark. they provide the foundation of our systems. i don't mind paying...shouldn't they both reap some benefits for their contributions to our success?
I'm glad ***** is free software (Score:2)
Re:I'm glad ***** is free software (Score:2)
Now that both Linux and Red Hat are resticting (or controlling, to say the least) the use of these trademarks, the term freedom needs some redefining.
Luckily CentOS doesn't use either Linux or Red Hat in its distribution. Some other clones (like Tao Linux and White Box Enterprise Linux) do.
I still don't get it (Score:2)
I find it misguided. The reasons I have heard so far do not make it sound like a good idea to do what the LMI is doing.
Put it this way. Is there any situation you can honestly imagine that makes what LMI is doing seem remotely useful? I can't. This is not going to promote quality, it is just going to annoy people and has already caused at least one person to stop providing a free service to the Li
INL (Score:2)
Re:Apparently, yes. (Score:2)
Then he goes into a long discussion of what trademarks are, framing his position as "protecting" people who use "Linux" in their name from "collisions". And implicitly referencing the value of trademark in ensuring that things called "Linux" really are "Linux", and not just, say, Windows3.1 GPL'd as "Microsoft OpenLinux 4.1".
But that all reads as rationalization for LMI charging license fees in Torvalds' name. Because he specifically addresses the lic
Re:Apparently, yes. (Score:2)
Your strawman, excluded middle fallacy just digs deeper the hole you claim was just a "badly handled initial email". It
Re:Apparently, yes. (Score:2)
Your guys have a simple plan. It's no different than the plan used by thousands of others capitalizing on pure IP like trademarks. It's not even an unethical plan. What is unethical is the lies about how this is "just to p
Re:INL (Score:2)
And it certainly is a power play: it's for power over the trademark, which obviously Torvalds controls. The question is what to do with that power. If Torvalds uses it to charge companies for licenses, which he's doing, then that will inhibit the u
Re:Where will it go? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Where will it go? (Score:1)
Re:Where will it go? (Score:1)
Re:Where will it go? (Score:1)
You're *NOT* allowed to look at, change, or redistribute the source code of the English word 'Linux'... unless you have specific permission from the author to do so... assuming anyone has copyright on it... so... on second thought... maybe you can tweak the hell out of that 'print "Linux";'
Go, go, go!!! Do it quickly!!!!!111!!!1ONE!!!
We need a new license plate (Score:1, Interesting)
In defense of Linus. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:In defense of Linus. (Score:1)
In my newbie days... (Score:1)
Re:In my newbie days... (Score:1)
Re:In defense of Linus. (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Whose business model is this? (Score:1)
SCO's business strategy was to lie to practically everyone and hope that the courts found in their favour. As you can see, that's not going so well.
The Linux trademark isn't a business strategy, it's just an attempt to ensure that no one uses the Linux name without his permission in their products. That isn't exactly big news. The Mozilla Foundation does it already, and there's bound to be a number of others who have adopted a similar policy.
Re:Whose business model is this? (Score:1)
I'm a Linux fan myself (Mandriva), but adopting a litigious attitude doesn't make FOSS more attractive to me, it leaves a bitter taste in my mouth. If I wanted to trade blows with patents, trademarks... reputation this, strategy that... we've got Microsoft, Apple, IBM, and Dell for that bag of shenanigans.
To me,
Re:Whose business model is this? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:1/10 = 1/9? (Score:2)
It says More than 10%.
1/9 > 10%, so your reasoning is wrong.
Re:1/10 = 1/9? (Score:1)
Think before you post.
Re:1/10 = 1/9? (Score:2)
My reasoning is correct. I only said the poster's reasoning was wrong. I never said the article was right. The poster claimed 1/9 is wrong because it is not equal to 10%. The article might be wrong, but not for the reason the poster stated.
Re:1/10 = 1/9? (Score:2, Funny)
#define 1/10 1/9
Problems solved.
Re:1/10 = 1/9? (Score:4, Insightful)
You sure hit that nail on the head...if you go back and read the summary carefully , you'll note it says "More than 10 percent".
Pot, meet kettle.
Re:Thanks for playing, but you're an idiot. (Score:3, Informative)
All the article says is "more than 10%
Before citing the article, you might want to try actually READING the article, genius.
From TFA:
Not that this even touches on the fact that the GP's post was criticizing the story fo claiming 1/9 was equal to 10%, which it clearly wasn't, but if yo
Re:1/10 = 1/9? (Score:2)
No, no, no. The article got it wrong! 10% is 1 in 10, and pi remains to be 3.333333... as it's always been/
Err (Score:2)
[/pendant]
Re:Err (Score:2)
huh? (Score:2)