The USPTO issued a ruling last week which denies the company's claim on the term, but does leave Dell with the option of appealing.
Dell describes cloud computing as the 'custom manufacture of computer hardware for use in data centres and mega-scale computing environments for others'.
But the USPTO ruling stated that Dell's claim on the term was not specific enough to warrant a trademark.
"Registration is refused because the applied-for mark merely describes a feature and characteristic of applicant's services," the USPTO said in its filing.
"In addition to being merely descriptive, the applied-for mark appears to be generic in connection with the identified services, and therefore incapable of functioning as a source-identifier for applicant's services."
When news of Dell's cloud computing trademark push first surfaced earlier this month, many in the industry raised objections.
It was claimed that the term had been freely used by numerous other companies, news organisations and industry pundits to describe large-scale hosted computing systems and web-based services.
This was also recognised by the USPTO in handing down its decision. The office cited Lexis Nexus search results which suggest that the term dates back to the mid-1990s when used to describe the network computing systems of the day.
Patent office rains on Dell's cloud claim
By
Shaun Nichols
on Aug 20, 2008 3:12PM
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Tags:
software
Partner Content
Promoted Content
Have ticket queues become your quiet business risk?
New Microsoft CSP rules? Here’s how MSPs can stay ahead with Ingram Micro
How Expert Support Can Help Partners and SMBs Realize the Full Value of AI
Empowering Sustainability: Schneider Electric's Dedication to Powering Customer Success
Fabric workshops help partners tap into data services demand growth.




