Dell's cloud computing effort must proceed without exclusive trademark

By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published August 18, 2008, 4:42 PM

Key to Dell's comeback as the leading server manufacturer is the repair of its image as a fair corporate citizen. So this week's public notice that it probably can't trademark the phrase "cloud computing" won't help.

An effort initiated by Dell in March 2007 to register the phrase "cloud computing" as a United States trademark appears destined for defeat, as the US Patent and Trademark Office's database now indicates it sent Dell a non-final action notice last Tuesday refusing its request.

A non-final action notice is exactly what it implies: not the last word on the subject. According to the USPTO database, "no final determination as to the registrability of the mark has been made." A deep perusal of the contents of the notice to Dell last week, however, turns up 41 screenshots of Web pages from 2007, most notably from BusinessWeek and TechTarget, showing the phrase being used in a general fashion without reference to Dell.

Announced that same March, the Dell Cloud Computing Solution is not a hosting service for business applications, but rather a marketing and support program for data center-class servers that customers may use to build such services for their own customers. As the company implied at the time, designs for such data center clusters may be "hyper-scalable," meaning that customers may require rapid increases in capability and capacity, which may involve virtualization for data center consolidation.

But exactly why anyone at Dell would expect an entire pre-existing category of technology -- one which it acknowledged was pre-existing on the very day the marketing campaign was launched to address it -- has never been fully explained. The Cloud Computing launch took place merely two months after Kevin Rollins stepped down as CEO and Chairman Michael Dell assumed his role, meaning it's likely that Cloud Computing was already under way at Dell prior to the management shift.

The concept of providing computing services over a network has also gone by the names utility computing and grid computing, and the idea actually predates both the PC and the Internet by several years. The creators of the BASIC programming language, John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz, foresaw their language's use as a timesharing system control language as far back as the late 1960s.

The association of the concept with clouds may have come by way of a kind of grafting of an old metaphor for Internet routing with a diagram for utility computing services, where in both cases, neither server nor client really had to "care" about what goes on in-between. Exactly who came up with the "cloud" is in dispute -- many credit Bell Laboratories -- though a serious discussion of the use of clouds in routing protocols culminated in IETF documents such as RFC 3056. IBM was a key contributor to that 2001 document on the use of IPv4 protocol on older network backbones to link IPv6 addresses during the Internet's transition period.

Comments

Reminds me of when Intel tried to claim a number as a trademark!

How about "Dell Cirrus Computing"?

Score: 0

|

Maybe they could reapply and trademark the word "computing"...

Score: 0

|

How about "We Must Be High Because Our Heads Are In The Clouds Computing"

Score: 0

|

Can Linux do BitLocker better than Windows 7?

Betanews kicks off a new series with a look at how the Linux operating system's FDE stacks up against BitLocker, the Windows feature that today commands a $120 premium.

Firefox 3.5: The need for speed

This has been the big payoff week for Mozilla's developers, who worked overtime to squeeze out the last drop of performance from their new JavaScript engine.

'GeoHot' gets a shower, cleans up nice, reveals new iPhone 3G S jailbreak

Either puberty has been very kind to the author of the new 'Purple Ra1n' jailbreak tool, or George Hotz may also have some adequate Photoshop skills.

What's Next: Obama gives 'Einstein' the go-ahead, while China gives 'Green Dam' a thumbs-down

Plus: If you put up a Web site and name it after you and you're a federal judge, you might not want a bunch of weird nudity hanging around on it.

Why would Windows 7 customers spend $120 more for BitLocker?

For pre-orders from now until July 11, Microsoft is offering the Windows 7 Professional SKU for a very steep discount. So why invest in Ultimate?

Geeks vs. journalists: A tale of two worldviews

Recovery with Angela Gunn Why geeks think most mainstream journalism is flaky, and why the mainstream thinks geeks are trying to kill them. (They're both right.)

Fire in downtown Seattle data center knocks out businesses, online services

Small fire has global impact with payment centers, city services down.

Hybrid satellite cell phones aren't far off

The first satellite in Terrestar's hybrid cellular/satellite phone network has been launched.

SMS could be a critical iPhone vulnerability, says white-hat hacker

Mac hacker Charlie Miller knows how to get into your iPhone.

Will Oracle's Java-based Fusion middleware 'fuse' with Java?

Now that Oracle has acquired Sun Microsystems, Java developers and supporters are wondering when Oracle will formally welcome Java into the family.

All together now: iPhone and Palm Pre, likely to both grace O2's UK portfolio

European wireless network operator O2 has reportedly reached a deal to exclusively carry the Palm Pre in the UK. O2,...

Vista's dead: Microsoft kills an OS and no one cares

Carmi Levy: Wide Angle Zoom Can you kill an operating system? Microsoft is about to find out.

Kantaris Media Player 0.5.7

July 3 - 5:34 PM ET

Wine 1.1.25

July 3 - 5:30 PM ET

ChrisTV Online! Free 4.00

July 3 - 5:22 PM ET

glu 1.0.19 RC1

July 3 - 5:11 PM ET

Website-Watcher 5.1.0 Beta 10

July 3 - 1:20 PM ET