Comment by jll29
Comment by jll29 4 days ago
What the OP was talking about is the negative connotation that goes with the word; it's certainly a poor choice from a marketing point of view.
You may say it's "silly to obsess", but it's like naming a product "Auschwitz" and saying "it's just a city name" -- it ignores the power of what Geffrey N. Leech called "associative meaning" in his taxonomy of "Seven Types of Meaning" (Semantics, 2nd. ed. 1989): speaking that city's name evokes images of piles of corpses of gassed undernourished human beings, walls of gas chambers with fingernail scratches and lamp shades made of human skin.
Well, I don't know anything about marketing and you might have a point, but the severity of impact of these two words is clearly very different, so it doesn't look like a good comparison to me. It would raise quite a few eyebrows and more if, for example, someone released a Linux distro named "Auschwitz OS", meanwhile, even in the software world, there are multiple products that incorporate the word prism in various ways[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]. I don't believe that an average user encountering the word "prism" immediately starts thinking about NSA surveillance program.
[1] https://www.prisma.io/
[2] https://prism-pipeline.com/
[3] https://prismppm.com/
[4] https://prismlibrary.com/
[5] https://3dprism.eu/en/
[6] https://www.graphpad.com/features
[7] https://www.prismsoftware.com/
[8] https://prismlive.com/en_us/
[9] https://github.com/Project-Prism/Prism-OS