Hotel Being Sued for Using the Dewey Decimal System
cbull writes "Did you know the Dewey Decimal System isn't in the public domain? The rights are owned by the Online Computer Library Center. They are suing the Library Hotel in New York for trademark infringement. In addition, according to the article, libraries pay at least $500/year to use the system."
Yeah... my car gets 1260 furlongs to the barrel... and it's gonna stay that way damnit.
If you are afraid that evil decimals will place you under the oppressive whim of metric (but not US imperial), you should go to your safe haevn of roman numerals and weights and measures based on the Kings' anatomy.
I never knew so many /. posters were so ignorant of trademark, service marks, patants, and copyright distinctions. You cannot copyright such a thing. At best, you could get a patant on a method of finding prime numbers. OCLC's law suit is the right action for them to take, if you understand the way the laws work.
They can claim trademark violations because the hotel is using the marks owned by OCLC without permission. It would be like some no-name snack company naming their products "Twinkies" and "Ding-Dongs". Now I'm off to paste this to all the others who don't bother to understand the law before spouting off about how bad it is.
frob
//TODO: Think of witty sig statement