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by leipert 1092 days ago
> In addition, you may not use any of the Marks as a syllable in a new word or as part of a portmanteau (e.g., "Gitalicious", "Gitpedia") used as a mark for a third-party product or service without Conservancy's written permission.

https://git-scm.com/about/trademark

Disclaimer: I work for GitLab, but I think that name predates this policy. Just sharing in case you weren't aware.

2 comments

More information in this email thread: https://public-inbox.org/git/20170202022655.2jwvudhvo4hmueaw...

> The USPTO initially rejected our application as confusingly similar to the existing trademark on GitHub, which was filed in 2008. While one might imagine where the "Git" in GitHub comes from, by the time we applied to the USPTO, both marks had been widely used in parallel for years. So we worked out an agreement with GitHub which basically says "we are mutually OK with the other trademark existing".

> ...

> So GitHub is essentially outside the scope of the trademark policy, due to the history. We also decided to explicitly grandfather some major projects that were using similar portmanteaus, but which had generally been good citizens of the Git ecosystem (building on Git in a useful way, not breaking compatibility). Those include GitLab, JGit, libgit2, and some others. The reasoning was generally that it would be a big pain for those projects, which have established their own brands, to have to switch names. It's hard to hold them responsible for picking a name that violated a policy that didn't yet exist.

Thanks for bringing this to our notice. Will need to check this with our legal team. Meanwhile we have a registered trademark for Gitopia in multiple jurisdictions as well as classes.