The solution is simple, just hard to accept: if the publishers don't like the technology, they should not provide electronic copies of the works they publish.
Unfortunately this is true, as you can see here.
Adobe has a trademark on the dictionary word "illustrator". This reminds me of a story I heard from a friend of mine who lives in Ireland: apparently the show "Who wants to be millionaire?" could not air there under this name because the national lottery holds a trademark on the word millionaire. Call it sad, call it insane, but this is IP crazed world we live in.
The solution is simple, just hard to accept: if the publishers don't like the technology, they should not provide electronic copies of the works they publish.
Like "Internet does Dallas"?
Unfortunately this is true, as you can see here. Adobe has a trademark on the dictionary word "illustrator". This reminds me of a story I heard from a friend of mine who lives in Ireland: apparently the show "Who wants to be millionaire?" could not air there under this name because the national lottery holds a trademark on the word millionaire. Call it sad, call it insane, but this is IP crazed world we live in.