X-pop3-spooler: POP3MAIL 2.1.0 b 4 980420 -bs- Delivered-To: pcg AT goof DOT com From: Shaw Terwilliger Message-Id: <199804210002.TAA26914@babba.advancenet.net> Subject: Re: PGCC is a registered trademark of The Portland Group, Inc. To: sheril AT pgroup DOT com (Sheri Liddell) Date: Mon, 20 Apr 1998 19:02:57 -0500 (CDT) Cc: beastium-list AT Desk DOT nl In-Reply-To: <353BE608.3CFB@pgroup.com> from "Sheri Liddell" at Apr 20, 98 04:19:20 pm Content-Type: text Sender: Marc Lehmann Content-Length: 704 Lines: 15 I'm wondering how long this acronymn has been in use, for both products. Do Marc and the PGCC people have any reason to dispute this trademark based on a pre-existing usage? Kinda like the Linux trademark thing, which was overturned when it was proven to a judge that the term had been in use long before the person who claimed to have "invented" it? I'm kinda fuzzy on the legalities here (as I'm a software developer and not a lawyer), but could a free piece of software exist peacefully with commercial software while sharing names? I can't see how calling the Pentium GNU C Compiler "PGCC" would cause the Portland people to lose any market share. -Shaw Terwilliger (twig AT advancenet DOT net)