"windows" is a generic term. MS looses law suit.
Quote:
Read more at eWeeks
Lindows.com on Tuesday won an important early tactical victory against Microsoft in their ongoing trademark dispute. The judge ruled that 'windows' must be considered in its historical user-interface context.
The U.S. District Court in Seattle ruled in favor of Lindows.com's assertion that the jury should consider the historical use of the term 'windows' in graphical user interfaces rather just its current usage as being synonymous with Microsoft Windows.
The court also ruled that after a word is declared generic it would continue to be generic, and thus could not be made a corporate trademark. Chief District Judge John Coughenour said in his Tuesday ruling: "If the term is found to be generic 'it cannot be the subject of trademark protection under any circumstances.'"
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In that event, were the jury to find for Lindows because it decided that 'windows' was historically a generic term for computer GUIs, Andris said, "it would appear that Microsoft would be at risk of losing its Windows trademark all together."
"The rulings are a major victory for Lindows.com. Essentially, the Court's ruling confirms that a company, no matter how much money it spends, cannot buy a word out of the English language," said Daniel Harris, Lindows.com's lead trial counsel in a prepared statement.
This is something that always has puzzled me... "windows" is a dictionary-word, so copyrighting it always seemed to me like risky business.
This could set an interesting precedent, too.
In this case, windows was a word before MicroSoft started using it. But what in other cases?
What about words that weren't originally in the dictionary, but have become a "generic term"? I'm thinking "walkman" (copyrighted by Sony), "CD" (Philips) and the likes here.
Those words are in the dictionary nowadays, and therefore generic, thus not copyrighted anymore?
Any thoughts?