SkyDrive users will find themselves firing up a service with a different name sometime soon, but there’s no reason to panic: Their account files will still be there.

Microsoft announced Monday that its cloud storage service will be renamed OneDrive, citing a trademark dispute with British broadcasting firm BSkyB over the original name. The name OneDrive, Microsoft said, points to the main advantage of any cloud storage system — the fact that users are able to store all kinds of media in the same place and access those files from anywhere.

“We believe the new OneDrive name conveys the value we can deliver for you and best represents our vision for the future,” wrote Ryan Gavin, Microsoft’s general manager of consumer apps and services.

Those who use the company’s free SkyDrive service or who pay for additional space and features in SkyDrive Pro — soon to be OneDrive for Business — won’t have to do anything to transfer their files to the “new” service. The company’s temporary page for OneDrive promises that it will feature “everything you love about SkyDrive and more,” though the firm hasn’t elaborated on new features.

Microsoft has said that the OneDrive name will be in place “soon,” but did not give a firm release date.

The Washington Post