Return-Path: Received: from CS.CMU.EDU by A.GP.CS.CMU.EDU id aa14397; 8 Jan 94 0:01:02 EST Received: from Sunset.AI.SRI.COM by CS.CMU.EDU id aa14805; 7 Jan 94 23:59:12 EST Received: by Sunset.AI.SRI.COM (4.1/SMI-4.1) id AA01193 for reed@umn-cs.cs.umn.edu; Fri, 7 Jan 94 18:05:05 PST Return-Path: Received: from NEWTON.Macsyma.COM by Sunset.AI.SRI.COM (4.1/SMI-4.1) id AA01180 for /usr/lib/sendmail -oi -fslug-errors@ai.sri.com common-lisp-internal; Fri, 7 Jan 94 18:03:36 PST Received: from RIEMANN.Macsyma.COM by NEWTON.Macsyma.COM via INTERNET with SMTP id 270164; 7 Jan 1994 20:19:34-0500 Date: Fri, 7 Jan 1994 20:11-0500 From: Richard Petti Subject: Macsyma and Maxima To: common-lisp@ai.sri.com, alu@freud.arc.nasa.gov, stat-lisp-news@umnstat.stat.umn.edu Message-Id: <19940108011149.9.PETTI@RIEMANN.Macsyma.COM> Recently it has come to the attention of Macsyma Inc. that various mathematical software is being distributed under the name of "Maxima." I have been requested to clarify the various rights surrounding the software and the trademarks. 1. Software copyrights to derivatives of M.I.T.'s Macsyma Macsyma Inc. and several other companies (such as Paradigm and Fort Pond Research) have licensed the original software from M.I.T. The U.S. Department of Energy has the right to license copies of its derivative of the M.I.T. software. To my knowledge, these are the only organizations which can license softwarede derivatives of the M.I.T. Macsyma code. These software packages are definitively not public domain software. Some parties distribute derivatives of M.I.T.'s Macsyma software by ftp. Users of this software are required by law to first obtain a license from D.O.E. or one of the commercial licensees, then use the ftp'able software as enhancements. While Macsyma Inc. reserves the right to enforce these restrictions, we have not chosen to interfere with use of derivative sources by researchers. Historically, this situation arose from disputes in the U.S. over the commercialization of partially-government-funded academic research. Various U.S. governmental orders in the mid-1980's affirmed the rights of universities to license such research results. We feel that academic-government-commercial collaboration is essential to an efficient technology development and diffusion, and we are eager to work with qualified parties to develop and commercialize scientific software. We have incorporated numerous pieces of academic software in the past 1.7 years, including ODELIN2 (Shunro Watanabe on ODE's), extended inverse Laplace transforms (Michael Clarkson), PDELIE (Peter Vafeades on Lie symmetries and solutions of PDE's), with more such enhancements in the pipeline. 2. The name "Macsyma" The name "Macsyma" is a registered trademark of Macsyma Inc. in the U.S. and other major countries. Macsyma Inc. inherits an agreement from Symbolics Inc. permitting the D.O.E. to use the name "D.O.E. Macsyma." No other entity has the right to use the name Macsyma or closely similar names in the distribution of mathematical software. Some parties who distribute derivatives of M.I.T. Macsyma use names such as "Paramax" and "Aljabar;" these names are not in conflict with the registered trademark "Macsyma." The name "Maxima" is considered by Macsyma Inc. to be an infringement of the Macsyma trademark, though we have refrained from legal action. We request that (1) distributors of such software alter the names of their software and (2) information sources which list software packages not to list mathematical software which uses this name. Trademarks serves several useful purposes: (1) they help users easily and reliably distinguish products and information, and (2) they help suppliers to gain recognition by users with a minimum of confusion. I hope this helps clarify the situation. Richard Petti President Macsyma Inc. 20 Academy Street Arlington, MA 02174-6436 tel: 617-646-4550 fax: 617-646-3161 email: petti@macsyma.com