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Debian–Mozilla trademark dispute

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Mozilla Corporation software rebranded by the Debian project deals with a 2006 software branding dispute and its resolution, between Mozilla Corporation and Debian Project.

The branding issue developed when Mike Connor, representing the Mozilla Corporation, requested that the Debian Project comply with Mozilla standards for use of the Thunderbird trademark when redistributing the Thunderbird software.[1][2] At issue were modifications not approved by the Mozilla Foundation, when the name for the software remained the same.

In 2006 the Debian Project subsequently rebranded the Mozilla Firefox program,[3] and other software released by Mozilla, so that Debian could continue to distribute the software with modifications permitted, without being bound by the use of trademark requirements that the Mozilla Foundation had invoked. The new names established by Debian were Iceweasel for Mozilla Firefox, Icedove for Mozilla Thunderbird, and Iceape for SeaMonkey. These changes were implemented in the subsequent version of Debian (Etch). In July 2007, Iceowl, a rebranded version of Mozilla Sunbird, was added to the unstable branch of Debian.[4]

IceWeasel

Iceweasel
Developer(s)Debian Project
Operating systemLinux, GNU and variants
TypeWeb browser
LicenseMPL/GNU GPL/GNU LGPL tri-license
Websitepackages.debian.org/buster/iceweasel Edit this on Wikidata

History and origin of name

Mozilla Foundation owns the trademark “Firefox”[5] and claims the right to deny the use of the name and other trademarks to unofficial builds.[6] The Debian Free Software Guidelines are used by the Debian project to determine whether a license is a free license, which in turn is used to determine whether something can be included in Debian. As the logo did not meet these requirements, it could not be used by software which was to be included in Debian. This effect of the Mozilla trademark policy led to a long debate within the Debian Project in 2004 and 2005. During this debate, the name “Iceweasel” was coined to refer to rebranded versions of Firefox. The first known use of the name in this context is by Nathanael Nerode,[7] in reply to Eric Dorland's suggestion of “Icerabbit”.[8] It was intended as a parody of “Firefox”.[9] “Iceweasel” was subsequently used as the example name for a rebranded Firefox in the Mozilla Trademark Policy,[10] and became the most commonly used name for a hypothetical rebranded version of Firefox. By January 1, 2005, rebranding as a strategy was being referred to as the “Iceweasel route”.[11]

The term "ice weasel" appeared earlier in a line which Matt Groening fictionally attributed to Friedrich Nietzsche: "Love is a snowmobile racing across the tundra and then suddenly it flips over, pinning you underneath. At night, the ice weasels come."[12]

Debian was initially given permission to use the trademarks, and adopted the Firefox name.[13] However, because the artwork in Firefox had a proprietary copyright license which was not compatible with the Debian Free Software Guidelines, the substituted logo had to remain.[14]

Trademark agreement revocation

In February 2006, Mike Connor, representing the Mozilla Corporation, wrote to the Debian bug tracker and informed the project that Mozilla did not consider the way in which Debian was using the Firefox name to be acceptable.[1] Connor confirmed that the Mozilla Corporation was revoking the previous agreement which allowed Debian to use the Firefox name. Further messages from Mike Connor clarified Mozilla's new trademark policies: usage of the Firefox name is not allowed unless the rest of the branding is used and all of the browser's changes are approved by Mozilla Corporation.

The immediate problem caused by the new policy was Debian's inability to use the official Firefox logo due to its proprietary license failing to comply with the Debian Free Software Guidelines. Additionally, as Debian releases are frozen on a long-term basis, software in the frozen stable releases needs to be patched for any newly discovered security issue. Under the revised guidelines, in order to use the Firefox name, approval from the Mozilla Corporation would have been required for all security patches, but the Debian project felt it could not put its security in the hands of an external corporation in that manner.[15]

The "Iceweasel" name was revived in the Debian community as a possible name to give the rebranded version of Firefox. The Iceweasel found in Debian is not GNU IceWeasel (now GNU IceCat) but a rebranded Firefox created by the Debian project. The Debian maintainer has stated that he will "get in touch with [the GNU IceCat/IceWeasel team] to see what we can do together".[16] Similarly, Debian renamed Mozilla Thunderbird and SeaMonkey, to Icedove and Iceape, respectively.

Rebranding

According to packages.qa.debian.org, Iceweasel, Icedove and Iceape were first accepted into the Debian project's unstable repository on November 20, 2006, on October 14, 2006, and on December 1, 2006, respectively. Icedove migrated to Etch and Thunderbird was removed on November 11, 2006. Iceape migrated to Etch on January 11, 2007, (the old Mozilla suite having previously been removed on October 6, 2006). Iceweasel migrated (and Firefox was removed) on January 18, 2007. Debian's first stable release to include Iceweasel, Icedove, and Iceape was Debian 4.0 (Etch), released April 8, 2007. Soon after the renaming Debian also replaced Mozilla's unbranded logos with new logos designed to fit with the new names, drawn by Ricardo Fernandez Fuentes.[17][18]

Subsequent products

Debian's Iceweasel, Icedove, Iceowl, and Iceape are respectively based on Mozilla's Firefox, Thunderbird, Sunbird, and SeaMonkey. The rebranded products still use some Internet-based services from Mozilla, including the Mozilla plugin finder service, and Mozilla add-ons and their update notifications. There has also been no change to how non-free components, such as Flash, are found or used.

Icedove

Icedove is an e-mail client distributed by the Debian project. It is based on Mozilla Thunderbird, but is made entirely of free software. With Icedove, the Debian project aims to provide a version of the Mozilla Thunderbird e-mail client which has not yet been kept in synchronization with upstream development of Thunderbird as originally planned. It removes the proprietary artwork and plug-in repositories used in the official release by the Mozilla Corporation, which are classified as non-free by free software advocates.[19]

Iceape

Iceape is an Internet suite distributed by the Debian project. Iceape is based on SeaMonkey, but is made entirely of free software. The Debian project aims with Iceape to provide a version of the SeaMonkey Internet suite which is kept in synchronization with upstream development of SeaMonkey while removing the proprietary artwork and plug-in repositories used in the official release by the SeaMonkey Council, which are classified as non-free by free software advocates.

Note: As of Debian release Lenny, Iceape has been removed due to lack of development support within the Debian community. Libraries iceape-dev and iceape-dev-bin are still available but the application itself is not. However it is included with newer version of Lenny including the current stable, squeeze. The new version of Iceape is based on Seamonkey 2.

Iceowl

Iceowl is a calendar application distributed by the Debian project. It is based on Mozilla Sunbird, but is made entirely of free software.

Licensing

The rebranded programs are available under Mozilla's standard MPL/GPL/LGPL tri-license. Like Mozilla, the default icons are under the same tri-license, but unlike Mozilla, there are no trademark restrictions.

User agent problem

Some web sites do not recognise the browsers' User agent strings and refuse to work properly.[20] As a workaround, Iceweasel 3.5.5 adds a "like Firefox x.x.x" string to the User-Agent.[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Debian bug report on use of Mozilla Firefox trademark without permission".
  2. ^ "mozilla thunderbird trademark restrictions / still dfsg free ?".
  3. ^ "Re: Will IceWeasel be based on a fork or on vanilla FireFox?".
  4. ^ Overview of iceowl source package
  5. ^ U.S. Trademark 78,344,043; see History_of_Mozilla_Firefox#Naming
  6. ^ "Mozilla Trademark Policy".
  7. ^ "Nathanael Nerode 27 Feb 2004 email to debian-legal".
  8. ^ "Eric Dorland 27 Feb 2004 email to debian-devel".
  9. ^ "Gnuzilla Homepage". Gnu.org. 2010-10-17. Retrieved 2010-11-09.
  10. ^ "Mozilla Trademark Policy (Version 0.6 (draft))". Mozilla Foundation. 2004-09-28. Retrieved 2011-06-12.
  11. ^ "Joel Aelwyn 01 Jan 2005 email to debian-legal".
  12. ^ Groening, Matt (1986). Love Is Hell. Pantheon Books. ISBN 0-394-74454-3.
  13. ^ "Gervase Markham 14 June 2005 email to debian-devel".
  14. ^ "Gervase Markham 19 June 2005 email to debian-devel".
  15. ^ "Debian Bug Report #354662 Message #256 (Approval of Security Backports)".
  16. ^ "Facts about Debian and Mozilla Firefox".
  17. ^ "copyright" file from Iceweasel package in Debian, version 2.0.0.2+dfsg-3
  18. ^ Dorland, Eric; Hommey, Mike (2006-11-13). "iceweasel (2.0+dfsg-1) unstable". Debian Changelog iceweasel. Retrieved 2011-11-22.
  19. ^ "GNUzilla and IceCat".
  20. ^ "Microsoft breaks HotMail for Linux users?". Linux-watch.com. 2008-11-07. Archived from the original on 2010-01-03. Retrieved 2011-01-30.
  21. ^ "#399633 - iceweasel: Please mention Firefox in the user-agent string. - Debian Bug report logs". Bugs.debian.org. Retrieved 2010-11-09.