Stuart Buchanan

> 
> Hi Curt,
> 
> At the risk of being a case of "if the hat fits...."
> 
> On Wed, Feb 16, 2011 at 3:36 PM, Curtis Olson wrote:
> > I hate to wade into mud wrestling matches.  But for every one who is on
> > their high horse about being pristine in our non-use of any possible
> > trademarked items ... have you browsed through our aircraft?  We have
> > liveries from just about every airline imaginable, past and present.
> 
> Yes, and as I said in the other post (which crossed in the ether with
> yours), I personally think that's a mistake and a legal risk (albeit a
> small one).
> 
> > What I don't like to hear is arguments along the line of: person "A"
> can't
> > submit anything that could ever possibly be a trademark infraction by
> > anyone's estimation, but person "B" we will let get away with it.  Oh
> and by
> > the way, we really should go through our repository and clean out any
> > possible trademark infringements ... maybe some day.
> > First of all this smacks of targeting or interpreting our policy
> differently
> > for different people... and that usually is done on the basis of some
> other
> > agenda.  Maybe the person in question has invited some of this, maybe
> they
> > haven't, but applying our policies in different measures to different
> people
> > can quickly get petty and immature.
> 
> I don't think I am holding Jack's work to a higher standard than anyone
> else
> here, though other committers may have different standards to me.
> 
> As mentioned on the other post, I'm applying the same standards I've
> applied
> to my own work based on discussions on this list:
> 
> http://www.mail-archive.com/flightgear-
> de...@lists.sourceforge.net/msg13303.html
> 
> (Oh, that brings back memories - we were all so young, a new aircraft
> was a big deal, CVS)
> 
> Melchior's comment is an interesting one, but I've no idea if it has
> any legal basis.
> 
> > Second, saying that "oh I wish we'd retroactively fix our repository to
> > honor this policy perfectly", and then doing nothing about it also is
> really
> > weak.  It sounds good on the face of it, but at the end of the day what
> > matters is action, not words.
> 
> It might also lead to a commit war, which would be bad. I'd much prefer a
> clear
> policy at a project level and then consistency with that policy.
> 
> At present I don't think we have a policy - though it's possible that
> my experience
> with the Pitts is an exception and we are quite happy to use trademarks in
> the
> data package.
> 
> It sounds like your view is that including trademarks in the data
> repository is
> perfectly OK. Correct?
> 
> If that's the case and the majority of devs agree then I'll bite my
> tongue,
> though like Melchior I won't commit it myself.
> 
> > I think it's pretty accepted that flight simulators can reproduce
> company
> > liveries in the process of realistically modeling the world.  I know
> that
> > has been widely debated (AA, et. al) but the reality is that people are
> > creating liveries of all kinds of companies all the time.
> > Where do we draw the lines?  Is it ok to reproduce an airline livery,
> but
> > not some other company livery?  As far as I can tell the people arguing
> that
> > we can't have a red bull logo are on really shaky ground from a
> > "consistency" perspective.
> 
> See my post which crossed with yours. I think where there is precedent
> we're
> (relatively) OK. the danger lies in trademarks that have not been used
> regularly
> within simulators and which have litigious owners.
> 
> > Do you want to argue this from a legal standpoint?  Do we only include
> > anything that we have written permission from the original company to
> use?
> >  In that case probably we'll have to rip out half of our simulator.  How
> far
> > do we want to take it?  Do you think aircraft manufacturers have given
> us
> > explicit permission to replicate their designs?  Aircraft systems and
> > cockpit displays?  Tire manufacturers?  ACME rivet company?  I've got
> > nothing on file from them.  Building shapes and names and logos?  If we
> have
> > to get written permssion to replicate anything, then we might as well
> pack
> > it all up and go home, as should every other simulator developer.
> 
> There is a legal difference between objects/copyright and trademarks which
> is
> important. We could fairly easily have aircraft liveries and buildings
> that do
> not infringe trademarks.
> 
> > I only wade in because this whole thing smacks of a pissing match and I
> get
> > strong indication that our policies are being selectively interpreted by
> > some to gain an advantage in this stupid pissing match and not for the
> > benefit and quality and safety of the FlightGear project itself.
> 
> I don't think there's much of a pissing match going on here - I encouraged
> Jack
> to release his AH-1 under the GPL and committed the original version to
> git, so
> to suggest I have an axe to grind is mistaken.
> 
> I admit I'm being paranoid here, and that there is a gray area. However, I
> think
> it is a good idea to air these issues on the list.
> 

Curt has it right. Get real guys. No one is going to sue a non-existent
organization with no assets. The worst they will do is tell us to desist.
Which we will do of course.

If you want to remove or alter almost every livery in our inventory, fork
the data in git and go right ahead ...

Vivian
 



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