On Tue, 22 Feb 2005 13:51:57 +0000 Lewis Jardine wrote: > If this is the case, then Debian could make itself easy to rebrand by > ensuring that all uses of the Debian logo to brand the distribution > are in one location; distributing it is fine, so no-one would have to > worry about accidentally shipping one (as long as the copyright > license is Free).
This seems like a good suggestion, I would say. As an example: there are many many images (especially desktop wallpapers) out there that are derivative works of the Debian Open Use Logo. Some of them would be Free (at least copyright-wise) if the Open Use Logo were itself Free: once the copyright license of the Open Use Logo is DFSG-free, we could ship those ones in main. They do not claim that the swirl is the logo of some other distro or of some other computer-related product. Nor do they claim that something else is Debian when it's not. As a consequence, trademarks should not be a problem... Oh my goodness, now I am again going towards the conclusion that trademarks are orthogonal to DFSG-freeness... :-( Please, someone help me! >:-( -- Today is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday. ...................................................................... Francesco Poli GnuPG Key ID = DD6DFCF4 Key fingerprint = C979 F34B 27CE 5CD8 DC12 31B5 78F4 279B DD6D FCF4
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