| Again, take a look at the wording from Red Hat for comparison: https://www.redhat.com/en/about/trademark-guidelines-and-pol... https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Legal:Trademark_guidelines#Tr... The examples Red Hat gives as acceptable are likely similar wording to how you would offer WordPress hosting without titling your service merely “Enterprise WordPress”. As for why you don’t receive trademark rights when you are granted a license to code: “In addition to the license text, open source publishers commonly include statements separate from the license indicating that trademark rights are not provided.” “One of the primal questions about trademarks in F/OSS projects is, absent a clause excluding a trademark grant, 'Do the open source software licenses imply a trademark license?' […] Given the large proportion of OSI-approved licenses that are either silent on trademarks, or prohibit only endorsement, advertising or other specific behaviors, and the number of software offerings that may be distributed under these licenses, the impact of an implied license would be far-reaching. With the caution that this has not been tested by the courts, the answer should be a clear 'no'. […] Although rights to the use, modification and redistribution of the code are granted under the F/OSS licenses, trademark rights are not provided inherently and often are expressly excluded as a point of clarification. […] The US courts have generally resisted opportunities to imply a trademark license.” —Tiki Dare (Director of Trademarks and Marketing at Sun Microsystems, Inc.) and Harvey Anderson (General Counsel of the Mozilla Corporation), International Free and Open Source Software Law Review, doi:10.5033/ifosslr.v1i2.11
https://www.jolts.world/index.php/jolts/article/view/11/37 |
What you've linked here are the trademark owners wishes about how their marks be used. They are perfectly reasonable, sure. But they don't supersede the doctrine of fair use. That's the important bit. Do you understand that guidelines, requests or even contracts do not superceed the law?
Both your links are titled as "guidelines". Because that's all they are. They are guidelines as how the trademark owner wishes their marks to be used. If you violate the guidelines, you may or may not be in legal trouble but that's up to a court. Not Redhat.
From your Redhat link:
>In these Guidelines, we are not trying to limit the lawful use of our trademarks, including their “fair use,” but rather describe for you what we consider the parameters of lawful use to be. Trademark law can be ambiguous, so these Guidelines are meant to inform you about what we believe are acceptable uses.
And this:
>As for why you don’t receive trademark rights when you are granted a license to code:
This is wayy out of left field. Where did I suggest such a thing? I have no confusion whatsoever about the distinction between copyright and trademark. I'm not sure why you're bringing it up.
Listen, since I claimed the use is likely covered by Nominative Fair Use you've replied four different times and not once come close to properly articulating a legal argument as why you disagree. For that reason, I'm going to bow out of this conversation now. Cheers.