It seems that the Linux Foundation has decided that both “systemd” and “segmentation fault” (lol?) are trademarked by them.

  • roguetrick
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    852 years ago

    Just like champagne only comes from the champagne region of France, true segmentation fault only comes from a linux program shitting itself.

    • @wmassingham
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      502 years ago

      Everything else is just a sparkling memory error?

    • bluGill
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      212 years ago

      Linux is the imposter here. Segmentation fault refers to how the PDP-(I forget) hardware organized memory. It comes from the original unix implementation which linux has never had any part of.

      • HeartyBeast
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        82 years ago

        They aren’t satinf they have a trademark on the phrase ‘ segmentation fault’. They are saying the artwork called ‘segmentation fault’ contains a trademarked image/logo/whatever

        • squiblet
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          22 years ago

          What is this segmentation fault logo or image? I’m not familiar with anything like that and searching for it hasn’t helped.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        x86 and x86_64 still have segment registers so it’s not exactly entirely archaic, but they’re not really relevant so that doesnt change what you said. I dont have the exact details on who implemented segmentation first, so I cant elaborate on that.

      • squiblet
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        02 years ago

        It doesn’t matter because trademark law is about usage and active protection of rights, not origination.

        • bluGill
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          122 years ago

          It does matter because projects like *BSD can prove continuous usage of the term. As such either the trademark is easy to break (it is common use), or it can only be a trademark in very specific contexts that are unlikely to apply.

          • squiblet
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            22 years ago

            Sure, what I was saying is that whether someone else created it in the 70s isn’t significant for trademark law. If multiple entities have been using it since then without claiming exclusivity would be significant.