Michael Bimmler wrote:
On Dec 18, 2007 2:36 PM, Platonides Platonides@gmail.com wrote:
I found weeks ago a paper advertisement on which the character was browsing wikipedia (identifiable by the logo). IMHO they'd need WMF permission to do so but maybe they have! How could i know? There must be a better way than snail mail to the US (suggested by cary).
Try contacting Mike Godwin by email: mgodwin at wikimedia dot org It is usually the fastest way.
Many, if not all, of the cases where an organisation asks permission to use TM'd logos like the puzzle globe pass through the OTRS system, I have forwarded several on to Mike Godwin and in all the cases I've dealt with they've been reasonable - and thus authorised - uses.
For an example, I had one where someone was publishing an algebra textbook and wanted a question based on a formula to predict when the English Wikipedia will reach six million articles. Permission was sought, and granted, to illustrate that question with the puzzle globe logo.
Most cases are like this, newspapers are often a case where they can use the logo under fair use provisions (as we do on Wikinews for Google &c). Yes, we need to encourage people to ask, yes we need to be generous in granting rights to use, and NO, we don't want to persecute people who in ignorance use the logo unless it is to defame the Foundation.
I would suggest not emailing Mike on this one, and instead hammering things out on this list. Mike reads stuff here and will likely respond when he thinks it is appropriate. Something from several weeks ago in a periodical or newspaper is likely too late to deal with beyond sending a polite letter or email as "for future reference ask" so I think it would be inappropriate to directly bother Mike when the issue can be discussed on this list and Mike can give a single response that explains the issue to everyone here who may be concerned about it.
Brian McNeil