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Note that this company in the past attempted to trademark WebAssembly [^1]. Maybe their product is still solid despite this, but I can't help but distrust the intentions of their upper leadership.

[^1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30758651




This has been discussed to death here and elsewhere. It isn't like wasmer doesn't have credible competition from companies well-funded than them, way bigger in size.

I'd wish folks focused on the incredible amount of engineering that has gone into wasmer. The breadth of its offering is astonishing for a team of its size. Sad that the engineering team couldn't be together for longer, but the runtime is impressive nevertheless.

I look at wasmer's various OSS repos from time to time to understand how it was put together. It has been very rewarding to say the least.

(yes, I am also aware of the fallout between Syrus, the founder, and a few ex wasmer engs, but let's also focus on the good parts too, folks!)


Right, by no means do I want to disparage the product (which is open source anyways) nor derail the conversation. I just think it's important to bring up since this post is just the company's landing, which would obviously be positive about the product and company, especially in case someone missed those discussions. Right now I don't see any paid offerings, but things like attempts to hijack an entire language would hopefully come into consideration before paying them.

That said, trademarking WebAssembly seems to spit in the face of the engineering and technical design work that went into WebAssembly before even Wasmer arrived. Perhaps not as sleek and polished as a VC-backed startup, but we can praise Wasmer for what it has accomplished while also expressing reservations regarding the people who stand to profit from its success.


> but let's also focus on the good parts too, folks

No, as many readers possible should be informed. This no name startup attempted to steal what was supposed to be a standard runtime format. Imagine what they’d do on a larger scale with that sort of behavior. That’s not a company that deserves to grow, we have enough Google’s and Apple’s.

A lot of these companies play good guy by open sourcing their products. Given this one’s commercial struggle, who says they genuinely want the world to see their code, Is it not possible they have no other choice?

An open source, closed spec product doesn’t really add up, it’s ingenuine, greedy, and downright stagnant.


I think what you're suggesting is to essentially follow an entity around and post the first controversy you can think that's related to them.

In which case violates the site's guidelines:

> Eschew flamebait. Avoid unrelated controversies and generic tangents.


> Avoid unrelated controversies.

Seems like unethical behaviour on their part is related to their product offering.

And it is pertinent that there are alternatives like wasmtime that don’t have such issues.


I don't really see how a trademark dispute that has well since passed is helpful the conversation about the product today.

I'm glad for the sliver of technical discussion that did occur in this thread, but most of it was "controversy" that has been discussed over and over before and is pointless.

Personally I think this forum is best when the discussion steers more technical, especially in a tech related thread.

The constant scarlet lettering is tiring.


Well, I’m sorry your entertainment took a back seat here.

HN is an advertising medium for tech companies. That’s why it exists. When I and others in this thread see an unethical company benefiting from that exposure, we feel compelled to point out that the company is unethical. That way the target audience for the tech product can make an informed choice about whether they want to do business with unethical folks.

If you feel our comments are off topic, go ahead and flag/downvote.

But I’m guessing it’ll be like tilting at windmills.


Hacker News foremost is a news aggregator for hackers. To quote the guidelines:

> Anything that good hackers would find interesting. That includes more than hacking and startups. If you had to reduce it to a sentence, the answer might be: anything that gratifies one's intellectual curiosity.

What you're doing is violating the guideline:

> Please don't pick the most provocative thing in an article or post to complain about in the thread. Find something interesting to respond to instead.

I did flag your comments as I feel it violates that guideline at least, and I feel your tone violates others.

On a personal note you at least motivated me to use Wasmer in the future, though I may have chosen them anyway for the performance.

Your crusade may not be having the effect that you think it is.


My tone? That’s being condescending for no reason. I’ve been nothing but polite to you.

And my crusade? Look at my comments on this thread, I’ve only replied to you. (And I’ve never commented on wasmer before, to my knowledge). I’ve tried to explain to you why everyone else talks about the shady things this company does. And for explaining that to you, I get condescended to.

The guidelines are what HN aspires to be. It’s a good goal. What I told you was what HN actually is. It’s why Ycombinator funds this website. It’s why tech companies strategise on how best to get attention from HN. How to write blog posts that HN will like. When to post to get the most upvotes and views.

You can blind yourself to that reality if you want. You can go ahead and use whatever tech you want. It’s really no skin off my back. Have a nice day :)


[flagged]


I don't think name calling is warranted. I'm not trolling, I just think the comments brought on flamebait unrelated to the tech.

I also don't see what there is to gain from bringing up the same controversy over and over. What's the end result? What action would you like them to take?

As I said in another comment I'd much rather hear about the tech as it is today than the same one topic of the past over and over.


I don’t think calling someone a troll is name calling. If anything it was more an attempt to describe your behavior. But you’re more than welcome to downvote, flag, and sanctimoniously recite HN guidelines as we all know you love to do.

>What’s the point in repeatedly bringing this up? What action would you like them to take?

Like many others, I’m bringing it up again because this company is unethical and shouldn’t be trusted for the greater good of standardizing runtime environments and the tech industry as a whole. This startup should end, that’s the action I believe.


"credible competition from companies well-funded than them, way bigger in size" -- which ones are them?


Companies that own other runtimes used for running Wasm server-side:

  * Intel (WAMR) - Market cap: $105B
  * Fastly (Wasmtime) - Market cap: $1.2B
  * Google (V8) - Market cap: $1.5T
  * Tetrate Labs (Wazero) - Market cap: ~$200M (guesstimate)


Thanks. Interested in out-of-browser runtime here so Google does not count. I think Intel and Fastly are together at https://bytecodealliance.org/ along with Microsoft and Mozilla. wazero is totally new to me, will watch it.


Thanks for bringing this up. It's important not to easily forget (even if some may forgive) and that's what a community is for.


Thanks for the info, that's unbelievable to even have that odd idea.


Given all the other trademarks in open source [1], can you tell me why this is even relevant?

[1] -https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_trademarked_open-sourc...


Typically the trademarks are held by the collation/organization behind the OSS or the open standard. Either that, or held by the person/org who created the software and released it. Here, wasmer is not the inventor of WebAssembly, and the group behind webassembly (the w3c community group and w3c working group) [^1] probably would be the ones you'd expect to own the trademark.

It seems part of the motivation for Wasmer to apply for the trademark was because they felt snubbed by the Bytecode alliance [^2] and wanted to start their own foundation (with blackjack and hookers, presumably). The Bytecode alliance doesn't own any of the trademarks either, and seems to be more of a collaborative effort, but is worth mentioning as part of the overall story.

[^1]: Groups listed here: https://webassembly.org/. and members here: https://www.w3.org/Consortium/Member/List and https://www.w3.org/community/webassembly/participants. Note that a few Wasmer employees (the CEO, for one) belong to the community group, but don't chair it.

[^2]: https://bytecodealliance.org/ and https://wasmer.io/posts/wasmer-and-trademarks


These trademarks appear to be owned by the body that created the software in question.

Web assembly isn't just Wasmer. This move is like trying to trademark "internet" or "hyperlink" or "metaverse".


Their product is open source and MIT licensed, so their intentions shouldn't be relevant.


Ultimately their intention does matter, even open source projects tend to die once the financial interest in their success is gone. Most open source libraries you interact with are created in the course of building apps internally at a company, created by consultants and free lancers to support their consulting work, or are created as monetizable products in their own right.

Software is a hard and complex thing to build, people don't tend to work full-time on projects which they can't earn a living from.


> Ultimately their intention does matter, even open source projects tend to die once the financial interest in their success is gone.

> Software is a hard and complex thing to build, people don't tend to work full-time on projects which they can't earn a living from.

Wouldn't these be positive points towards how Wasmer is running the company? They are trying to keep their open source product alive by marketing and finding a way to build revenue, to continue to fund development.

In the end, if they fail, it's all open source, someone can fork and continue it if the demand is there. Until then, they are the ones doing it, and doing it well imo.


If they fail the IP is bought by a parent troll and everybody is sued using the term WebAssembly.


Who cares about the license of their products if you get sued for using the word WebAssembly


I mean, they lost the case, they're not going to be able to successfully sue anyone for using the word WebAssembly, which they could have done regardless of whether or not they trademarked it, so that's a moot point. Nevertheless, people seem to have no problems forking Firefox and not literally calling it Firefox. Other open source companies own trademarks, and no one is implicitly suspicious of their motives. In the darkest of timelines when Wasmer owns a trademark over the word WebAssembly just use another word in your brand.

It seems like people are specifically interested in spreading FUD about Wasmer and I can't see the justification for it.


They're creating a platform, and that's a risky thing to build on if you can't trust the company.

Sure it's open source, but unless you're at a scale where you actually can take it over and maintain it, that's not some magical escape hatch.

This isn't a theoretical thing for me. I've got a project in mind that wasmer would be a candidate for, and I ruled it out for this reason.


filing to trademark the name of technology invented by someone else is still a dick move.

It is as if Nodejs tried to trademark V8


Sure, but as dick moves by software projects go, it's far from the dickest.


As dick moves go, software projects are far from the dickest. But you cannot excuse a bad move by considering there is something worse somewhere.


Dick move is dick move.


So what?


Try forking Firefox without calling it a browser rendering HTML.




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