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by gojomo
2325 days ago
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Cirillo may have a reasonable trademark case that this specific name, 'pomodoro', & exact instantiation is something he 1st defined & popularized, as a trade, going back to even before there were websites/web-apps. See, for example, claims in the Wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomodoro_Technique But that is just a trademark claim to the name. This wouldn't appear to rise to the level of a patentable invention, and many similar incarnations of related ideas should be widely and independently implementable. They just couldn't use the same name as another's trade/business. (And yes, you can trademark a common plant aa your business name: America's most valuable company is "Apple".) So I do wish the creator of the `pomodoro.cc` service would just slap a new name on it, so that it could continue to provide value. (I perfectly understand someone deciding it's not worth the aggravation in the presence of veiled legal threats, but performing a name-patch might've been both faster & more effective than authoring a prickly "so long" message and urging people to share their opinions with Cirillo.) |
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This is what made me take the decision to throw away Pomodoro.cc and get out of this BS:
> I don't think it will be enough to change the name to return to the norm
If the main problem is the trademark why changing the name is not the solution?
He couldn't provide more info on that.
If one wants to bully another person with legal action, you are free to do that, but I don't have the time nor energy to follow this absurd BS.
To me he will always remain the creator of "The Trademark Technique"
PS: Apple is a company name and has a registered trademark and copyright for that company. His "invention" wasn't Pomodoro, but rather "Pomodoro Technique"..