Use of Haskell logos
K. Fritz Ruehr
fruehr at willamette.edu
Fri Dec 12 10:50:06 EST 2003
Well, I can't speak for anyone else, but as the designer of several
Haskell-related logos (including the ones used recently on the haskell.org
page), I am happy to let mine be used this way. If someone wants to use
them for more commercial purposes, I would reserve the right to consider
on a case-by-case basis.
Note that the T-shirts and other products listed in the haskell.org
merchandise section are provided on a non-profit basis (i.e., only
CafePress, the T-shirt company, makes any money: neither John Peterson,
nor I, nor the members of the secret hooded cabal of Haskell insiders get
a cut).
-- Fritz Ruehr
PS: there have been a couple of "silent updates" to the merchandise
available, including a frisbee and some baby clothes (links below). A
bigger crop of new products will appear in a few months (I have been
upgrading my systems during a sabbatical and need to re-install some
fonts).
* frisbee (er, "flying disc"):
<http://www.cafeshops.com/classyhaskell.7711131>
* Haskell toddler items: <http://www.cafeshops.com/HaskellBoys> and
<http://www.cafeshops.com/HaskellGirls>
> Given the open nature of the Haskell community, I am assuming that I don't
> need permission to use one of the Haskell logos on a web page I'm creating
> to describe my software project.
>
> A work-in-progress -- i.e. incomplete -- copy of the page concerned can be
> seen here: http://www.ninebynine.org/RDFNotes/Swish/Intro.html
>
> If I'm wrong, can someone please let me know, and I'll pull the logo.
>
> #g
>
>
> ------------
> Graham Klyne
> For email:
> http://www.ninebynine.org/#Contact
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