• @Zachariah
    link
    132 days ago

    The industry could easily switch to calling it ECMAScript.

    You have long ago abandoned the JavaScript trademark, and it is causing widespread, unwarranted confusion and disruption.

    JavaScript is the world’s most popular programming language, powering websites everywhere. Yet, few of the millions who program in it realize that JavaScript is a trademark you, Oracle, control. The disconnect is glaring: JavaScript has become a general-purpose term used by countless individuals and companies, independent of any Oracle product.

    • @guy
      link
      220 hours ago

      Yeah, sure, just as easily as people switched from saying “Twitter” to saying “X”

    • wkk
      link
      122 days ago

      […] it was decided that the language would be called “ECMAScript” instead. (Microsoft happily offered up “JScript”, but no-one else wanted that.) Brendan Eich, the creator of JavaScript and a co-signatory of this letter, wrote in 2006 that “ECMAScript was always an unwanted trade name that sounds like a skin disease.”

      I tend to agree with these sentiments