Dell loses bid for cloud computing trademark
Written by Planet Lowyat on August 18, 2008 – 11:50 pm -
Dell cannot register “cloud computing” as a trademark because the term is a generic one describing services offered by many companies, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has said in an initial ruling. Personally I think the name cloud computing is too common and I’m happy with the result.
The term refers to computing services that are delivered to end users over the Internet, often from a remote data center. It has been applied to many types of services, including storage services like Amazon’s S3, online anti-spam services, and hosted applications such as Salesforce.com’s customer relationship management service.
If Dell were allowed to trademark the term it could send dozens of other vendors scrambling to find an alternative buzzword to describe their services and avoid messy lawsuits. IBM, Microsoft, SAP, Yahoo, and Google all have employed the term cloud computing to promote their services.
The USPTO described its decision as “non-final.” Dell has six months to file a response or the USPTO will abandon the application.
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Tags: cloud, computing, Dell, trademark
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