The answer is no. You might recall that trademark law does not grant the TM owner the 
right to control all use of the mark. If the use is outside the scope of TM usage 
(namely, the identification of source), it is unlikely that the use invokes in TM 
rights at all...particularly under the facts raised in the question, here.

Rod
  

-----Original Message-----
    From: "Angelo Schneider" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
    Sent: 10/19/01 9:33:08 AM
    Cc: "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
    Subject: Re: Is inherited class a derivative work?
    
    Hi all!
    
    
    Rob Myers wrote:
    [...]
    > 
    > Out of curiosity could function/method names be trademarked to regulate
    > their calling? :-)
    
    In europe not.
    
    APIs and even data base schemata (what you get after executing a
    sequence of SQL create table statements) are explicitly noted as: not
    copyright able, not patent able, not trademark able.
    
    So a program written relying on an API never touches even any IP right
    associated 
    with the original work yielding that API (well linking or includign the
    original work (in-)to the distribution brings us back to the topic).
    
    > 
    > - Rob.
    > 
    
    Angelo
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Angelo Schneider         OOAD/UML         [EMAIL PROTECTED]
    Putlitzstr. 24       Patterns/FrameWorks          Fon: +49 721 9812465
    76137 Karlsruhe           C++/JAVA                Fax: +49 721 9812467
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