While it's difficult to compare the pettiness, this is definitely sillier than the WordPress thing as far as trademark enforcement goes.
Trademark-as-a-Weapon is becoming too common now. Are we going to be forced to use legally distinct (and confusingly different) names for all our libraries now to defend against this nonsense? Pick projects based on the brand protection posture of the licensors? What a waste of time.
Is this going to become a trend? Project starts making trademark claims years after a downstream library has been using it without issue. Bit rich, given how accessible libraries can bootstrap an initial product ecosystem.
Is it ever safe to use a trademark name? Will all packages now have to be generic enough to imply the product for which they connect? It”s not a Java/AWS/Redis/Wordpress/Shopify extension, but a thingbob, which just so happens to connect to That-Which-Shall-Not-Be-Named.
Trademark claims are also defended by the otherwise useless PSF. Here GvR objects to someone continuing Python-2 uńder the name "python-2.8" as well as "py28". Informally, bringing in lawyers was threatened at one point:
I would love for someone to fight out these bullshit trademark claims. Are you seriously going to win against a crate author for using your business name after letting them do it for 10 years and even featuring and recommending them on your own website?
Looks like Mysqlization tragedy, the best would be when FOSS maintainers join their corporate agile sprints to meet roadmap demands, with naming rights gun aimed under table lol.
First time I hear about Valkey, it acts as MariaDB in this drama. /s
> Looks like Redis is trying to take over the all the OSS Redis libraries.
> Jedis, Lettuce, and redis-py are down, they are now threatening redis-rs (link in reply).
There's no link in the post, and I don't have a link to the referenced reply, but I'm guessing the link is https://github.com/redis-rs/redis-rs/issues/1419
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