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You may wish to rethink the name, as you are likely infringing on PTC's trademark. PTC Creo (Formerly known as Pro/Engineer) is high-end CAD software, competing against Catia and NX.



Probably it isn't because there's PTC Creo, CREO Solutions, Creo Technologies, and Creo (from Creolabs), an app development platform.

Edit: Creo alone is indeed a restricted trademark[0].

[0]: https://www.ptc.com/en/documents/policies/copyright-and-trad...


When I searched online for the name there were essentially zero results for it so I'm surprised it would infringe anything. I'm not sure how trademark law works so I'll look into this though, thanks!


Google and Bing searches for "creo" give the PTC product as their first result. IANAL, but PTC could make the case that you are diluting their brand name by using it for your software, or worse, trying the phish their customers.


Is using part of someone else's name a violation of trademark laws? I'm genuinely curious!

I chose Creo because it means "to create" in Latin (I'm a sucker for Latin names), with docs obviously being short for documents.

I'd argue that Creo is just a generic word, it's not like the name is Leicadocs where that word is very firmly tied to a single company.


Potentially. If you stay away from mentioning or advertising anything related to their line of work (CAD software?) they'll have less of a claim of infringement. Also, trademark the name in NZ, if you haven't already. IANAL, YMMV, etc...


Are you a trademark attorney? Do these systems have any similarity beyond "create stuff on computers"?

IANAL.




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