T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
870.1 | Add Initiative | EUROPE::JORGENSEN | | Mon Jul 24 1989 06:15 | 9 |
| OOPS, missed the I.
EASINET = European Academic Supercomputer Initiative Network
Sorry,
Odd
|
870.2 | EASYNET is not a product | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Jul 24 1989 07:21 | 1 |
| Why would we have trademarked something we don't sell?
|
870.3 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Just a Coupl'a days.... | Mon Jul 24 1989 11:11 | 4 |
| There is also a Cad product sold in Australia, called Easynet.
q
|
870.4 | Historical perspective | IAMOK::MCCAULEY | Bob McCauley (DTN 273-5063) | Mon Jul 24 1989 13:42 | 16 |
| I'm not a lawyer, but here's what I recall about trademarking EASYnet.
There are at least two or three companies with products or services
named EASYNET. Digital never trademarked the name, primarily because
it isn't something we sell, but we also successfully rejected claims
from some of these other companies that we were infringing on their
trademarks, since we could prove that we had used the name first,
dating back to the early 1980s.
Corporate Telecommunications worked with the Law Department back in
1985 to determine what our options were. Since other companies had
products named EASYNET by that time, it would have been difficult to
obtain a trademark, and since we could continue to use it as the name
for our internal network, it didn't seem like a major issue.
- Bob
|
870.5 | Use it or lose it | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Honey, I iconified the kids | Tue Jul 25 1989 17:51 | 10 |
| Under a recent change in United States trademark law, for a trademark
to be "valid" (ie defendable against a claim in court), it must be
used to identify a real product.
I think this all kicks in 1990, when all the trademarks that exist only
in their registration papers and not in the marketplace will become
available. Too many good names are simply unavailable these days.
Fun fact: the first "DECnet" was a network of teletypewriters, and was
not a product of Digital.
|
870.6 | | HYDRA::ECKERT | Jerry Eckert | Tue Jul 25 1989 20:21 | 7 |
| re: .5
Under current law a trademark must be in use before trademark rights
can be attached. Blue Bell, Inc. v. Farah Mfg. Co. 508 F.2d 1260. The
change, which I believe takes place in November of this year, allows an
application for exclusive rights to be filed up to six months before
the mark is used in interstate commerce.
|