Hi, Ted Gould wrote: > Same as Pantone, a name equals a mixture of ingredients. Just because > you know how to make my grandmother's cookies doesn't mean that her > recipe has no copyright.
Not that I want to diss your granny's cookies... Pantone's considerably different. The only copyright material you get when you purchase a licence for Pantone is a spreadsheet with the names of the colours and suggested RGB/CMYK values for displaying them. The thing which Pantone wields as a weapon is trademark. You can't call a selection of colours Pantone, or a specific colour "Pantone 134 U" without permission from Pantone (and this is what they sell to computer programmers). I contacted Pantone about this a few years ago & had an interesting discussion. IIRC, the Scribus guys managed to get their hands on a copy of the Pantone colour sheet a while back, which is great, but if they used Pantone's trademarked colour names in their product they'd be exposing themselves. So if this were your granny's cookies, we'd be fine as long as we didn't call them whatever she called them :) Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Neary dne...@free.fr Tel: +33 9 51 13 46 45 Cell: +33 6 77 01 92 13 _______________________________________________ CREATE mailing list CREATE@lists.freedesktop.org http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/create