Prior use as a generic term isn't always enough though. In 1994 a competitor to Interop trademarked the generic word "shownet" as a purely hostile move, forcing Interop to stop using it because it had not previously been trademarked and the theory was that it would take to much time and money to fight. Thus, it is now called "InteropNet" and yes, it's heavily trademarked. Ole Ole J. Jacobsen Editor and Publisher The Internet Protocol Journal Office of the CTO, Cisco Systems Tel: +1 408-527-8972 GSM: +1 415-370-4628 E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] URL: http://www.cisco.com/ipj
- RE: Bake-off as trademark Michael Francois
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Marcus Leech
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Steven M. Bellovin
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Bill Manning
- Re: Bake-off as trademark hardie
- Re: Bake-off as trademark John Stracke
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Randy Bush
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Tim Salo
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Bob Braden
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Mike_Borella
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Ole J. Jacobsen
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Anthony Atkielski
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Jeff Weisberg
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Anthony Atkielski
- RE: Bake-off as trademark Rosen, Brian
- RE: Bake-off as trademark Rosen, Brian
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Scott Brim
- RE: Bake-off as trademark Bernie Volz
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Henning G. Schulzrinne
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Keith Moore
- Re: Bake-off as trademark Jim_Stephenson-Dunn
