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Re: Free Software Logo
From: |
Marcus Wilson |
Subject: |
Re: Free Software Logo |
Date: |
Thu, 29 Oct 2020 11:49:58 -0500 |
User-agent: |
Cyrus-JMAP/3.3.0-530-g8da6958-fm-20201021.003-g69105b13-v35 |
I really like this logo. It has the simple elegance you need when the
scale of the image is going to vary.
Thank you very much for this!
-mnw
On Thu, Oct 29, 2020, at 11:26 AM, Aaron Wolf wrote:
On 2020-10-29 9:22 a.m., Jean Louis wrote:
> * Aaron Wolf <[1]wolftune@riseup.net> [2020-10-29 19:00]:
>>
>> On 2020-10-29 8:40 a.m., Jean Louis wrote:
>>
>>> Did you see other logos on GNU website? That is what I meant. And
>>> there is no such thing as control of "free software logos" in the
>>> context of trademarks, GNU and free software dedicated groups do
not
>>> follow trademark doctrines. Open source groups do.
>>>
>>
>> GNU and free software *do* follow Trademark law. See e.g.
>> [2]https://www.gnu.org/graphics/agnuhead.html
>>
>> "The GNU head is, however, also a trademark for the GNU Project. If
you
>> want to use the GNU head to link to a website run by the Free
Software
>> Foundation or the GNU project, feel free, or if you're using it in
>> contexts talking about GNU in a supportive and accurate way, you can
>> also do this without permission. For any other requests, please ask
>> <[3]licensing@fsf.org> for permission first."
>
> Of course I know that. That is slightly beyond the point that I have
> mentioned and tried to clarify. There is way how would FSF and GNU go
> about the trademark violation and there is way how Mozilla or Rust
> would go about trademark violations.
>
> FSF and GNU would most probably do no legal action against
> perpetrator, RMS would give few public remarks if GNU software would
> be used with proprietary software. Though I do not believe there
would
> be court process, threats or similar. It would be in the spirit of
> friendship and friendly kind of ensuring observance.
>
> Legal option would be really the last.
>
> I am not representative for GNU. This is my opinion based on last 20
> years of observation.
>
I don't think it has happened that proprietary software ever claimed to
be GNU, but if that happened, the GNU project *would* take legal action
if they couldn't first get voluntary compliance. The FSF is not opposed
to legal enforcement of trademarks and copyrights (copylefts in this
case).
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References
1. mailto:wolftune@riseup.net
2. https://www.gnu.org/graphics/agnuhead.html
3. mailto:licensing@fsf.org
4. mailto:libreplanet-discuss@libreplanet.org
5. https://lists.libreplanet.org/mailman/listinfo/libreplanet-discuss
- Re: Free Software Logo, (continued)
- Re: Free Software Logo, Aaron Wolf, 2020/10/28
- Re: Free Software Logo, Stephen Paul Weber, 2020/10/29
- Re: Free Software Logo, Paul Sutton, 2020/10/29
- Re: Free Software Logo, Jean Louis, 2020/10/29
- Re: Free Software Logo, Stephen Paul Weber, 2020/10/29
- Re: Free Software Logo, Jean Louis, 2020/10/29
- Re: Free Software Logo, Aaron Wolf, 2020/10/29
- Re: Free Software Logo, Jean Louis, 2020/10/30
- Re: Free Software Logo, Aaron Wolf, 2020/10/29
- Re: Free Software Logo,
Marcus Wilson <=
- Re: Free Software Logo -> Where does FSF go?, al3xu5 / dotcommon, 2020/10/30
- Re: Free Software Logo -> Where does FSF go?, mray, 2020/10/30
- Re: Free Software Logo -> Where does FSF go?, Jean Louis, 2020/10/30
- Re: Free Software Logo -> Where does FSF go?, Yuchen Pei, 2020/10/30
- Re: Free Software Logo -> Where does FSF go?, Jean Louis, 2020/10/30
- Re: Free Software Logo -> Where does FSF go?, Matt Ivie, 2020/10/30
- Re: Free Software Logo, Jean Louis, 2020/10/30
- Re: Free Software Logo, Ali Reza Hayati, 2020/10/29
- Re: Free Software Logo, mray, 2020/10/29
- Re: Free Software Logo, Ali Reza Hayati, 2020/10/29