[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: A simpler idea (was: Re: Fair use and case analysis)



Hi, Harald and Steve,

I may not be thinking clearly here, but if I was even slightly interested in creating a fork, I would not even try to claim it was the IETF spec, I'd just claim it was RFC 5002, which would be just as effective for 99 percent of the cases I'd be interested in.

A quick peek at the USPTO site shows that, at least in the United States, the term RFC does not appear to have been trademarked for anything like Internet standards.

If it is true that there is no current trademark holder/protector for the term RFC, I think we can declare "game over" on the "must prevent fake IETF RFCs" concern, because we have no defense against the most likely attack vector.

And now, people can explain why I'm wrong, of course...

Spencer

From: "Contreras, Jorge" <Jorge.Contreras at wilmerhale.com>

(iii) Someone creating a fork and then claiming that it is the
IETF spec, or conforming to it, is involved in a matter of
fraud, not copyrights.  If "we" (or any other injured party) are
willing to invest the resources, there are ways to deal with
fraud that are probably more effective and more clear than any
dancing around with copyrights and ownership of text.

Agreed. In addition, this is where assertion of the IETF trademark
can be useful (i.e., the fork-er could be prevented from using the
term IETF to promote its deviant standard).




_______________________________________________
Ipr-wg mailing list
Ipr-wg at ietf.org
https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ipr-wg