I remember the article but it is misleading, apple rejected it base on automatic bot that looked at all trademarks, Oracle did not requested it and the problem was fixed.
Probably Oracle cannot use it anymore, guess is more a Folk term by now π
Everything can be trademarked, for example now Bitcoin asso iations were created to fight companies that try to trademaek the term, and tries to keep it free.
Good find. That is internet gold! I didnβt know that part of JavaScriptβs history. I guess it was a couple of years before I got into web development.
There would be arguable grounds that the trademark term has been "Genericide". However until it is proven in court, its not official.
Its a situation, where a trademark has gain such popularity and dominance over a term, that its trademark will no longer apply. Allowing even their competitors to use the same term, like almost every other english term in the dictionary.
Some well known example would be
Dumpster
Thermos
Hovercraft
Dry Ice
Heroine
These were actual trade mark terms that gotten so popular, they have lost their trademarks.
This is actually part of the reason why you would see "Google" putting their name on a 101 products, because some would argue "Google" has come to mean "Online Search" and hence no longer a trademark. While on the other hand, Google would argue it doesnt just mean search, but a 101 other different things and hence still a trademark. (Legals π€·)
I remember the article but it is misleading, apple rejected it base on automatic bot that looked at all trademarks, Oracle did not requested it and the problem was fixed.
Probably Oracle cannot use it anymore, guess is more a Folk term by now π
Everything can be trademarked, for example now Bitcoin asso iations were created to fight companies that try to trademaek the term, and tries to keep it free.
I was thinking about that since it didn't mention anywhere that Oracle asked for it to be taken down.
Why do you say Oracle cannot use it anymore?
I think it would be indefensible, that being said IE's interpretation of ECMAScript was called JScript specifically to avoid a fight.
'Javascript' has been trademarked since Netscape introduced it, 23 years ago.
True. Although, Sun owned the trademark. I don't know if it had purchased Netscape and inherited it.
Looks like they introduced it together.
tech-insider.org/java/research/199...
Good find. That is internet gold! I didnβt know that part of JavaScriptβs history. I guess it was a couple of years before I got into web development.
There would be arguable grounds that the trademark term has been "Genericide". However until it is proven in court, its not official.
Its a situation, where a trademark has gain such popularity and dominance over a term, that its trademark will no longer apply. Allowing even their competitors to use the same term, like almost every other english term in the dictionary.
Some well known example would be
These were actual trade mark terms that gotten so popular, they have lost their trademarks.
This is actually part of the reason why you would see "Google" putting their name on a 101 products, because some would argue "Google" has come to mean "Online Search" and hence no longer a trademark. While on the other hand, Google would argue it doesnt just mean search, but a 101 other different things and hence still a trademark. (Legals π€·)
This is a very complicated legal topic, and Wiki would have a much more elaborate explanation : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generic_trad...
So if im guessing, I would bet Oracle wouldn't sue over such a term, as it would just open a can of worms of it potentially being generalized.
Disclaimer : I am not a lawyer