On 7/25/17, 4:45 PM, "cwsteinb...@gmail.com on behalf of Carl Steinbach" 
<cwsteinb...@gmail.com on behalf of c...@apache.org> wrote:

>    "IceWeasel" and "MetaStore" are both examples of English compound words.
>    What exactly makes the former any safer than the latter?

Usually descriptive words are considered weaker for trademarks - if the words 
describe what it does, then it might be weaker.

"PainKiller" is a weak one, while "Aspirin" isn't. 

Uniqueness is useful, because an active defense is necessary to retain 
possession of a trademark - as a tautology, the more unique the phrase, the 
fewer occurrences there are to tackle.
 
But, in the case of Aspirin, Bayer did not defend the use lowercase "aspirin" 
and now only has a TM on the upper-case one "Aspirin".

IceWeasel is an infamous precedent of trademark dispute in the open source 
community

"The end of the Iceweasel Age" - https://lwn.net/Articles/676799/
+
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=354622

Cheers,
Gopal


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