Robert: There are plenty of other trademark policies for GPL software
out there http://lwn.net/Articles/216049/ however most of the trademarks
are not aggressively enforced. A notable exception is Red Hat - RHEL is
GPLed, but Red Hat is a trademark, so people who exercise their GPL
rights have to rename the result http://www.redhat.com/f/pdf/corp/RH-
3573_284204_TM_Gd.pdf so we end up with CentOS.

A strict reading of many of the other policies would result in mass
renaming of many packages, but (IANAL) trademarks are controlled by
actual enforcement actions, not policies, so in practice this doesn't
happen.

So there's lots of trademark policies out there, and trademark law is
not incompatible with Free Software, but the actual enforcement varies a
lot and there's not currently a standard trademark policy that allows
use by the free software community but retains the right to smack down
bad people (eg distributors of firefox with viruses).
http://tieguy.org/blog/2005/09/16/fri-16-sep-2005/
http://tieguy.org/blog/index.php?s=trademark&paged=2 and we can but hope
Luis will write the one true GPTML once he finishes his degree.

Back to the point, the difference between mysql-query-browser and
firefox is that MySQL AB doesn't aggressively enforce its trademarks
against distributions who ship versions of MySQL software. IANAL, but
the lack of enforcement gives tacit approval of this use of the MySQL
trademark by distributions, despite it not being permitted by the MySQL
trademark policy.

-- 
Some components are non-free
https://launchpad.net/bugs/83118

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