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Re: Trade and Service Marks
- To: Multiple recipients of list <comcifs-l@iucr.org>
- Subject: Re: Trade and Service Marks
- From: Brian McMahon <bm@iucr.org>
- Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2000 10:33:12 GMT
The case of "TeX" may be useful in providing analogies or precedents for what we want to do with "CIF". Donald Knuth, the author of the program TeX, states explicitly that users may modify the source code of the program if they so desire; but the resulting modified program may not be called "TeX" unless it passes a particular diagnostic test (called "TRIP") that he supplies. Hence, the C port of TeX (which was originally written in a Pascal preprocessor language) may be named TeX, because it produces identical output to the original software in the "TRIP" test; but a modification that produces PDF files as output is not permitted to be so called. However, such a modified program exists, and is known as pdftex (indeed, possibly as pdfTeX). Knuth has no problems with this. The American Mathematical Society has registered as trademarks the names TeX and AMS-TeX, the former on Knuth's behalf; the latter (referring to a particular implementation of TeX upon which is layered a macro package written by AMS) for its own use. In practice I have seen software packages with names such as OzTeX teTeX emTeX pdfTeX which may or may not pass the TRIP test; where they do, the package authors usually declare proudly in their documentation that they are genuine TeX implementations (usually just re-packaged for a different operating system) and include the TRIP test file in the package; or they clearly state that they are NOT compliant TeX implementations, and in what way they fail to comply. In practice, however, such programs usually are compatible with the canonical TeX software to a very high degree. On the other hand, typesetting systems such as ArborText Publisher Adept 3B2 do NOT claim to be "TeX" (sometimes make no reference to that program), even though at least some of their formatting engine must be based directly on the original TeX source. So I would certainly favour registering "CIF" as the dundamental term; and ideally providing some benchmark by which a file claiming to be CIF could be adequately certified. Formal registration of other devices such as mmCIF, pdCIF, coreCIF may not be necessary if it is expected that the community would handle the suffixes with the same measure of respect as in the TeX case. No doubt that respect arises in part from the trademark protection of the name "TeX", but also from the very clear licence under which Knuth released the software. Brian
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