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en:philosophy:rust_trademark [2024/01/14 22:30] throgh [Comparisons with other software trademarks] |
en:philosophy:rust_trademark [2024/11/22 23:21] (current) throgh [What are the issues?] |
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In short, the **Rust Foundation won't be happy with us applying patches and modifications** to their trademarked language **without " | In short, the **Rust Foundation won't be happy with us applying patches and modifications** to their trademarked language **without " | ||
+ | |||
+ | A free and libre oriented system cannot provide a package-manager besides its own to preserve the autonomy of the free system itself. What the users are doing is their own decision, but they should be always able to assure a consistent free and libre oriented system outside their own decisions that they are responsible for. If we would remove **Cargo**, we would need to ask for permission when we call the package **Rust**. And if we remove the package-manager (**Cargo**) we also create a not useful result as **Rust** depends on it fully when building. If we add needed dependencies for software based on **Rust**, we enlarge the number of our packages provided. | ||
To summarize the issues: | To summarize the issues: | ||
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* demands to ask for allowing modifications | * demands to ask for allowing modifications | ||
* complex structures | * complex structures | ||
- | * mandatory package-manager for build | + | * mandatory package-manager for building |
* packages downloaded at build-time can be non-free, so keeping that outside makes the whole build-system and infrastructure even more complex | * packages downloaded at build-time can be non-free, so keeping that outside makes the whole build-system and infrastructure even more complex | ||
- | The listing above only shows the major points, furthermore the Rust-Foundation is overreacting in our perspective with their trademarked language and demands handlings violating in fact free, libre software as it is based most on ethics and moral decisions as important, not what possible legal issues could be there. | + | The listing above only shows the major points, furthermore the Rust-Foundation is overreacting in our perspective with their trademarked language and demands handlings violating in fact free, libre software as it is based most on ethics and moral decisions as important, not what possible legal issues could be there. So to conclude: |
===== Big Picture ===== | ===== Big Picture ===== | ||
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The list can be enhanced for sure and clear to say that Rust is not only some sideload toolchain. As the buzzword " | The list can be enhanced for sure and clear to say that Rust is not only some sideload toolchain. As the buzzword " | ||
+ | |||
+ | It should be also mentioned that the **Rust Foundation** has a comparable [[https:// | ||
===== Solutions ===== | ===== Solutions ===== | ||
* **Rebranding** the entire language to avoid the trademark restriction. Such as [[https:// | * **Rebranding** the entire language to avoid the trademark restriction. Such as [[https:// | ||
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As an example, neither [[https:// | As an example, neither [[https:// | ||
- | Due to the anti-modification clause, Rust is a non-permissive trademark that violates user freedom. | + | Due to the very strict written |
+ | ===== But including Perl and / or Python, while both having also a strong trademark? ===== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Both projects have a clear trademark to protect the usage of the software itself against fraud. There is a difference as Python and Perl allow patching and modification defined within the four freedoms. | ||
+ | |||
+ | From [[https:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | < | ||
+ | (...) | ||
+ | |||
+ | Use of the word " | ||
+ | distributed application -- Allowed. If the standard version of the Python programming language is | ||
+ | modified, this should be clearly indicated. For commercial distributions, | ||
+ | your use is not covered by the nominative use rules described in the section "Uses that Never Require | ||
+ | Approval" | ||
+ | |||
+ | (...) | ||
+ | </ | ||
+ | |||
+ | From [[https:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | < | ||
+ | (...) | ||
+ | |||
+ | People sometimes ask if TPF's use of an onion in the Perl logo means that independent projects that use or | ||
+ | relate to Perl need TPF's permission to use an onion of their own design in connection with their project. | ||
+ | | ||
+ | The answer is "not necessarily" | ||
+ | legal bases for trademark protection is to make sure that the public can depend on a mark as an accurate | ||
+ | indicator of a particular source or relationship, | ||
+ | that the infringing mark creates a likelihood of confusion. Likelihood of confusion is determined based not | ||
+ | only on making a comparison of the marks side-by-side, | ||
+ | in which they are actually used. Thus, it's easy to imagine independent onions that would be fine, and | ||
+ | independent onions that might not be. Contact us at trademark@perlfoundation.org if you have any | ||
+ | questions, or would like us to evaluate a particular logo or usage to see if it would be an infringement. | ||
+ | |||
+ | (...) | ||
+ | </ | ||
+ | |||
+ | The comparisons are done intentional as Rust has no further interest within patching and modifications outside for special use-cases. We refer here exactly to the point again: It is possible to modify Python and Perl, calling both same way. It is not possible to modify Rust and a modification and complete rebranding is beyond possible without approaching that generic. So this is surely no point for a small team and project like Hyperbola! | ||
+ | |||
+ | And we close again for all interested with the definition of freedom: **Freedom is the power or right to act, speak, and change as one wants without hindrance or restraint.** | ||
+ | Demanding the opposite is not freedom per definition and surely freedom always is included with responsibility. So we speak only on behalf for Hyperbola as project as we write down our reasoning. Others may see it different, but this does not redefine our points here. |