This seems silly to me. Any claim by RSA that one was
violating their trademark would not stand up in court. This, actually
reminds me of the RC4 situation I ran into in 1996.


> At 02:09 PM 4/1/99 -0500, Perry E. Metzger wrote:
> >> Security Dynamics Technologies, Inc. has sent a letter to the P1363
> >> working group regarding trademark protection of the RSA name.  The letter
> >> is now available from our patents page
> >> http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1363/patents.html
> >> or directly at
> >> http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1363/letters/SecurityDynamics.jpg
> >
> >Now that their patent is getting ready to expire (next fall), RSA is
> >trying to crack down on anyone who refers to the use of the
> >algorithm by calling it "RSA".  They don't mind if you call it "type
> >1" or something else meaningless and irrelevant, though.  This is a
> >new low for a company known for self-serving legal bluster.
> 
> I should think that the approach taken by generic pharmaceuticals, 'compare
> with Brand X,' would also suffice to get around RSA's trademark issue.
> 
> --Steve
> 


-- 
sameer

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