Steve Holden wrote: > Far answers to this and all other (as far as I can determine) > hypothetical questions please refer to the license.
But note that no OSI certified open source license will grant the right to use a trademark. You gain trademark rights by having control over the quality of the described quantity. If you give up control (which the OSD requires), you cannot grant the right to use the trademark, or, if you do, then you will lose the ability to enforce the trademark. In the case of derived names like JPython, or IronPython, the PSF would have to claim in court that "everyone knows that Python is only and exactly Python, and that anything with prefixes or suffixes may be derived from the PSF-copyrighted work, but is not an official product of the PSF." That's reasonable, but harder to prove than insisting that no computer language may contain Python in its name without being the PSF-copyrighted work. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list