Trademark a logo using a font

I've seen two stances in EULA's that either allow for logos to be designed using the font (more specifically, the font is used for the wordmark portion of the logo) and then trademarking that logo... and those EULA's that do not allow a trademark to be pursued.

I'm wondering what the pros/cons of both stances are, and what might be the limitations. Particularly, those EULA's that do not allow this (some perhaps not even allowing the use of a font in a logo design, even if it won't be potentially trademarked). Are there problems for allowing this? Does the foundry lose some leverage or the ability to hold onto certain rights to the font?

Comments

  • Adam Ladd
    Adam Ladd Posts: 263
    Appreciate your insight and sharing of your practice, Joyce. Maximizing the usage and commitment on the customer end makes sense.

    Yes, on the legal side, my hope is that there would be minimal to no negative, unforeseen consequences or limitations put on the foundry or font if someone did get a logo trademark using the font (I don't know how that would occur, but considering worst case scenarios). Thanks!
  • @Adam Ladd I think it's very reasonable to determine the worst case scenario and then make a risk assessment.  That can't really be done here with us.  You need to find a legal expert you trust and go through that process with them.

    However, I would note that most foundries do permit logo use - it's just add on licensing.  That implies that there's no downside to permitting it per se.  The question is one of assessed value.  
  • Adam Ladd
    Adam Ladd Posts: 263
    @JoyceKetterer @Thierry Blancpain Agreed. Thank you both for expanding further on this with you insights and more context. I do appreciate it. If needing to dig deeper into the legal side, consulting a legal expert seems best course of action, but this was indeed helpful to clear some initial concerns.
  • In addition to practical draw backs pointed out by @Thierry Blancpain, it will also alienate a good portion of your clients who might read and even abide to EULAs.
  • @Johannes Neumeier I want so much to agree with you.  Perhaps having a bad EULA does alienate people... but I can tell you for certain that the people who tell me they love our EULA are almost never big spenders. 

    This is true even when it's a license compliance expert at a design firm.  You'd think that someone like that would be able to drive sales our way if they think our license is so much better than others but, alas, the data proves otherwise.  

    A good EULA needs to be it's own reward.  Literally.  Though it doesn't sell fonts it does lead easier license enforcement and less customer service.
  • Gotta say I agree with @JoyceKetterer, I think the market would look quite different if the EULA had a (noticeable) competitive advantage, but it doesn’t. It just helps you codify your standards of business and, let’s be honest, it gives a good night’s sleep to know that you understand your license. After-purchase license enforcement is, for most of us, not a common concern but an exceptional situation.
  • @JoyceKetterer Thanks, that makes a lot of sense, and I’ll be honest: the name of my foundry is also reflective of the scale of business I do. This hasn’t been an issue for me, so I simply didn’t consider it. I appreciate the depth and clarity of your comments, here and on other threads. They’ve been very helpful.
  • @Robin Mientjes may you go a long time before you encounter it!  It is possible to have big clients and not have them try to rewrite your EULA.  It's just a random thing.  

  • Additionally, we never permit editing inside our EULA.  We always produce an addendum for any changes.  That's for me later because that way the changed terms are clearly called out and easy to find.
    This is incredibly sane. Totally.
  • @Thomas Phinney that's the best compliment anyone could give me.  May I one day earn the right to put "incredibly sane" on my grave stone.

    A process note :  we do have a word version of our eula (and standard addenda) that the client's attorney can work in.  The first thing we produce is a redline against the public documents.  Once those edits are agreed on we use that to create  a "'miscellaneous addendum" which edits all the relevant standard documents.  

    This is the stuff I intended to cover in the panel I proposed to atypi on managing the client.  The idea was that since I didn't really think this paperwork stuff rose to an entire topic I invited someone to talk about scoping and another person to talk about getting useful feedback in review.  The three topics together felt very useful to me.  But I guess it was too dry for this year's committee because we were not invited to do it.  
  • It almost never comes up for FontLab with our app EULA(s), but next time it does, if I need to make an exception, that is how I will do it.

    (Hmmm, I think the plural of EULA should be EULAE. It sounds like it could be Latin, so....)
  • George Thomas
    George Thomas Posts: 645
    edited August 2018
    ...plural of EULA should be EULAE...

    For an acronym? No.



  • (That was intended as a joke, George.)

    Personally, I would love to hear Joyce do a 20-minute solo talk on EULA stuff, or be part of a panel discussion.
  • If a laser can contain a lasing element, I see no reason why Eula can't be pluralized as Eulae. Though one might instead argue that it should be singularized as Eulum.
  • A 20 minute solo talk not on the "sexy" intellectual eulae content stuff?  20 minutes on how to use the documents to manage the client in the process of negotiations and completion of a project?  Stuff like how to diplomatically discouraging them from editing the eula and using a miscellaneous addendum if you must?   

    @Thomas Phinney,  I think I'd have an audience of one.  

    But I was excited to hear what @Bruno Maag would say about scoping and @Jean-Baptiste Levée about getting useful feedback in review.  Client management is a crucial part of being a successful service provider and something so few people teach.  I'm sad that the reviewers didn't think it was an engaging topic.  Maybe it was just a bias against panels... They can be awful.  

  • Thomas Phinney
    Thomas Phinney Posts: 2,868
    edited August 2018
    FWIW, I was one of the reviewers, and I liked the proposal. But I think something like about 1/3 of the proposals I reviewed made the cut, which is about the same as the rest of the conference... somewhere around 1/4 or 1/3 of proposals make it. So it is quite possible to have a proposal rated above average and still not get selected.  :(
  • notdef
    notdef Posts: 168
    EULÆ, as in antennæ.