That reasoning seems to be begging the question a bit. That we should not make 
an exception so that there will be no exceptions. I suggested some pragmatic 
reasons why making an exception for these trademarks more successfully 
communicates the message for reuse than not doing so. And also how an 
unsuccessful communication on this point could be harmful. You do not seem to 
argue that any of my reasoning is inaccurate. Do you really find these 
practical difficulties to be less important than a perfect record of having no 
exceptions? What purpose do you see in refusing to make an exception where it 
seems to make practical sense?

Something that can't be used in any context can have no possible purpose for a 
copyright release. So far as I imagine it, such a release would lead to 
unnecessary confusion (debatable only to what degree) while offering no 
practical benefit. I am not at all bothered by the fact that maintaining 
copyrights on trademarks is inconsistent with the copyrights maintained on 
non-trademarks. I believe consistency to only be a worthwhile goal so long as 
it tends to promote clarity, which, in this particular case, it does not. I do 
not find that consistency is inherently desirable.

Birgitte SB

On Jul 3, 2012, at 8:03 PM, Tobias Oelgarte <tobias.oelga...@googlemail.com> 
wrote:

> We have special templates for this case which prominently inform the user 
> that the image is free due to reason XYZ but can't be used in any context due 
> to additional trademark restrictions.
> 
> This concept does not only apply to logos or trademarks, but also for public 
> domain cases. Commons hosts images which are public domain in some countries 
> (needs to include US) but not in other countries due to different copyright 
> laws. The same way some language Wikis host content that is free after local 
> law but not after US law. Another case are personal rights. For example the 
> German "Recht am eigenen Bild" is very restrictive and does not allow any 
> usage of a free image from any person.
> 
> What i mean is: We already have such restrictions for various images in our 
> collection and the re-user has to be careful to comply with all laws aside 
> the copyright law. Releasing the Logos under a free license and including a 
> template which mentions the restrictions would be common practice. Hosting 
> images with no free license is actual exception.
> 
> Am 04.07.2012 02:16, schrieb birgitte...@yahoo.com:
>> I can't disagree with your understanding  of the different IP laws, however 
>> this not a very commonly understood nuance.  Many people, when seeing the 
>> logo listed as "free" regarding copyright, will assume they can use it the 
>> same as any other copyleft or PD image.  They will not necessarily 
>> understand that trademark protections will interfere with their actually 
>> being able to use the symbol as an image. People who mistakenly use the 
>> symbol, and receive the required lawyerly letter to stop this, will feel 
>> betrayed by the fact it was listed as "free" of copyright.  However strictly 
>> accurate the plan to treat the two areas of IP law separately might be, it 
>> cannot be executed very well. Those people, misled by their poor 
>> understanding of how these separate areas of laws achieve very similar 
>> results, will feel burned. Their goodwill will be lost. They may even become 
>> convinced they had been intentionally tricked with mixed messages.
>> 
>> It much more pragmatic to simply reserve the copyright on trademarks. To 
>> maintain a consistent message of "Do not use."
>> 
>> Birgitte SB
>> 
>> On Jul 3, 2012, at 6:06 PM, Tobias Oelgarte<tobias.oelga...@googlemail.com>  
>> wrote:
>> 
>>> You will have to split between trademark laws and copyright laws. Both 
>>> concepts exist separately from each other. There are a lot of logos that 
>>> are not copyright protected. For example very simple text logos, depending 
>>> on country even more complex logos that don't reach the needed threshold of 
>>> originality or even works that are by now in public domain. Still this 
>>> logos and it's use is restricted due to trademark laws. So i don't see a 
>>> true reason why the Wikipedia logos should not be licensed freely, while 
>>> trademark laws still apply and we promote free content at the same time.
>>> 
>>> Am 04.07.2012 00:06, schrieb Ilario Valdelli:
>>>> Again, the logo is a symbol, it's not an image.
>>>> 
>>>> I don't agree with your concept because you can move the Commons content 
>>>> in another website also commercial.
>>>> 
>>>> So you should split content and repository. The content may be free, the 
>>>> repository may be not free.
>>>> 
>>>> Following your concept if a newspaper would use the Commons content, it 
>>>> should release under free license his website, his logo, his content.
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> On 03.07.2012 23:47, Tobias Oelgarte wrote:
>>>>> I don't know how it is handled after US law, but if i consider German law 
>>>>> then logos and trademarks are often even in the public domain, but 
>>>>> protected as a trademark itself. But i also think that our logo is 
>>>>> something to protect while being free at the same time. If we go strictly 
>>>>> after the policies the logos aren't free and should be deleted 
>>>>> (especially with Commons in mind, because it is violation of the policies 
>>>>> ;-) ). This is somehow contradictory to the mission itself. So i can 
>>>>> understand the point that Rodrigo put up as well.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Am 03.07.2012 23:37, schrieb Ilario Valdelli:
>>>>>> A mark is not a simple image.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> A mark it's a symbol.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> On 03.07.2012 23:32, Rodrigo Tetsuo Argenton wrote:
>>>>>>> So in your view, free images can be harmful? So why would I release a
>>>>>>> picture?
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> And you're telling me is more important to believe in the logo, instead 
>>>>>>> of
>>>>>>> checking the validity of what you are consuming? But we do not talk to 
>>>>>>> our
>>>>>>> volunteers always check the sources and not to believe blindly in a 
>>>>>>> single
>>>>>>> source?
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>> 
>>> 
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