This article makes for an interesting read. Here follow two early paragraphs for context:

Oracle controls the JavaScript trademark because in 2009 it acquired Sun Microsystems, which applied to trademark the name with the US Patent and Trademark Office back in 1995. The trademark was granted in 2000.

While the database giant does not use the name for any commercial products, its ownership of the trademark has led JavaScript-oriented organizations such as events biz JSConf to adopt branding that avoids the term. As the signatories to the letter observe, the world’s most popular programming language therefore can’t have a conference that mentions what it’s about.

Toward the end, the article mentions an initiative to legally pursue Oracle for trademark abandonment.

  • BatmanAoD@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    Cool! Oracle, a company famous for making good-will decisions, and open to being “urged” into doing the right thing. 🙄

    I suppose the open letter is a nice gesture, and I hope that the petition to cancel the trademark succeeds.

  • RedstoneValley@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    Just call it Ecmascript and be done with it. The name JavaScript was misleading from the beginning. Well, Ecma sounds like a skin disease but who cares.

    • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 months ago

      I could believe that a man could build a suit using arc energy technology. And I could believe that man could use that energy to kill aliens from outer space.

      But I could not believe that same man would ever use Oracle Cloud for his compute.

      Literally made Iron Man unwatchable.