Version 1.0 dated January 1, 2025
This trademark policy was prepared to help you understand how to use the Puter trademarks, service marks and logos with Puter Technologies Inc.'s Puter software.
While some of our software is available under a free and open source software license, that copyright license does not include a license to use our trademark, and this Policy is intended to explain how to use our marks consistent with background law and community expectation.
This Policy covers:
This policy encompasses all trademarks and service marks, whether they are registered or not.
Whenever you use one of our marks, you must always do so in a way that does not mislead anyone about what they are getting and from whom. For example, you cannot say you are providing the Puter software when you're providing a modified version of it, because recipients may not understand the differences between your modified versions and our own.
You also cannot use our logo on your website in a way that suggests that your website is an official website or that we endorse your website.
You can, though, say you like the Puter software, that you participate in the Puter community, that you are providing an unmodified version of the Puter software.
You may not use or register our marks, or variations of them as part of your own trademark, service mark, domain name, company name, trade name, product name or service name.
Trademark law does not allow your use of names or trademarks that are too similar to ours. You therefore may not use an obvious variation of any of our marks or any phonetic equivalent, foreign language equivalent, takeoff, or abbreviation for a similar or compatible product or service. We would consider the following too similar to one of our Marks:
When you redistribute an unmodified copy of Puter software, you must retain all trademarks, logos, and notices we have placed on the software to identify its origin. This includes:
If you distribute a modified version of Puter software, you:
Example of acceptable description: "This software is derived from Puter software and includes modifications for [describe your changes]."
You may use our word marks (but not logos) to accurately describe your software's compatibility with Puter software under these conditions:
You may describe your product as working with or being built for Puter if:
For open source projects that interact with or extend Puter software:
You may use our word marks (but not logos) for non-commercial community activities:
Conditions for community use:
You may not create merchandise or promotional items bearing our marks without explicit written permission from Puter Technologies Inc.
You may use our word marks (but not logos) in:
Include appropriate citations and trademark attributions in such uses.
When using our marks in online content:
When developing with Puter APIs:
All uses described above must also comply with the General Guidelines section of this policy and maintain the integrity of our marks as described in the How to Display Our Marks section.
You must not register any domain that includes our word marks or any variant or combination of them.
When you have the right to use our mark, here is how to display it.
The first or most prominent mention of a mark on a webpage, document, or documentation should be accompanied by a symbol indicating whether the mark is a registered trademark ("®") or an unregistered trademark ("™"). If you don't know which applies, contact us.
Place the following notice at the foot of the page where you have used the mark: "Puter is trademark of Puter Technologies Inc."
Always use trademarks in their exact form with the correct spelling, neither abbreviated, hyphenated, or combined with any other word or words.
Unacceptable: Puter-DB
Don't pluralize a trademark.
Unacceptable: I have seventeen Puters running in my lab.
Always use a trademark as an adjective modifying a noun.
Unacceptable: This is a Puter.
Acceptable: This is a Puter software application.
You may not change any logo except to scale it. This means you may not add decorative elements, change the colors, change the proportions, distort it, add elements, or combine it with other logos.
However, when the context requires the use of black-and-white graphics and the logo is color, you may reproduce the logo in a manner that produces a black-and-white image.
These guidelines are based on the Model Trademark Guidelines, available at http://www.modeltrademarkguidelines.org., used under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en_US.