Linux software maker Lindows said Monday that an appeals court had turned away an appeal from Microsoft in the two companies" ongoing trademark spat, setting the stage for a trial later this year.
In the case, Microsoft is alleging that the company"s Lindows operating system software infringes on Microsoft"s Windows trademark, while Lindows claims that Windows is a generic computing term. Microsoft had appealed a February ruling in which a federal judge
ruled that the term is a generic one if it was generic in November 1985, when Microsoft introduced Windows 1.0. Last week, an appeals court declined to hear Microsoft"s motion to appeal that ruling.
"We"re looking forward to getting this trial back on the fast track and presenting our piles of evidence--videos, magazines, internal Microsoft documents--which clearly show the generic use of "windows" before Microsoft commandeered the word," Lindows CEO Michael Robertson said in a statement. "This outright denial of Microsoft"s appeal confirms that the trial will focus on how consumers and the software industry used the term "windows" in the 1980s, before Microsoft dominated the landscape."