If you install it in the global namespace as "libdwarf" and it
therefore creates an anti-dependency on the original, then, yes, you
have stolen the name of the previous project.  If instead you
installed it under some elftoolchain/libdwarf, or maybe
elftoolchain-libdwarf, that might be different.

Daniel

On Fri, Feb 20, 2015 at 3:01 PM, Steve Kargl
<s...@troutmask.apl.washington.edu> wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 20, 2015 at 02:10:39PM -0800, Daniel Wilkerson wrote:
>>
>> Another major bug is using the name libdwarf when a libdwarf project
>> already exists which you are explicitly imitating: you are basically
>> violating his trademark.  Firebird changed their name to Firefox just
>> because another project existed.
>>
>
> Huh?  The project name is "The Elf Tool Chaini Project".
> The fact that it contains a library named libdwarf does
> not violate anything.
>
> Or, are you saying that all non-Dennis-Ritchie derived C compiler
> must call their runtime library something other than libc?
>
> --
> Steve

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