What does it stand for?
#3
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 2,607
Likes: 14
Kinda.
The original Pacific Southwest Airlines was acquired (or merged, I dunno) with US Airways a while back, which gave Airways rights to all of the trademarks of the original PSA for ten years.
At the end of that ten years, rather than let that trademark out into the Public Domain (how many reincarnations of Eastern or Pan Am have there been?) Airways renamed one of its subsidiaries to PSA, just the letters, not the actual name, so as to maintain the rights to the PSA trademark.
That subsidiary was originally named Jetstream International Airlines, which is where the JIA and JS codes come from.
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#4
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Dec 2017
Posts: 660
Likes: 0
That’s neat to know. Funny how they did a better job keeping track of that after 10 years when google let their rights to the domain google.com slip once. Some random guy bought it on the market. They then bought it back from him for 6006.13 (numbers that look like google) which he then donated to charity and google matched.
#5
In a land of unicorns
Joined: Apr 2014
Posts: 7,045
Likes: 63
From: Whale FO
Kinda.
The original Pacific Southwest Airlines was acquired (or merged, I dunno) with US Airways a while back, which gave Airways rights to all of the trademarks of the original PSA for ten years.
At the end of that ten years, rather than let that trademark out into the Public Domain (how many reincarnations of Eastern or Pan Am have there been?) Airways renamed one of its subsidiaries to PSA, just the letters, not the actual name, so as to maintain the rights to the PSA trademark.
That subsidiary was originally named Jetstream International Airlines, which is where the JIA and JS codes come from.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
The original Pacific Southwest Airlines was acquired (or merged, I dunno) with US Airways a while back, which gave Airways rights to all of the trademarks of the original PSA for ten years.
At the end of that ten years, rather than let that trademark out into the Public Domain (how many reincarnations of Eastern or Pan Am have there been?) Airways renamed one of its subsidiaries to PSA, just the letters, not the actual name, so as to maintain the rights to the PSA trademark.
That subsidiary was originally named Jetstream International Airlines, which is where the JIA and JS codes come from.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
#6
Banned
Joined: May 2017
Posts: 2,012
Likes: 0
#9
No, AA has a history of holding onto its trademarks, same with US Airways. Hence is why you see Air Cal, TWA, Reno Air paint jobs on AA 737 mainline equipment and on the US side, you have PSA, Piedmont, America West, Allegheny paint jobs on the Airbuses.



