Julia Kreger wrote:
Over the past few weeks I’ve been in a number of discussions regarding some of our most very fun topics. Branding, Trademarks, and Interoperability. [...]
Thanks Julia for starting this timely and important discussion. I agree that trademarks are not a goal in themselves, they are just means to an end, and periodically revising those end goals is necessary. To add some historical context, my summary would be that until now the Board has been using trademarks to drive two strategic objectives: 1- Interoperability: a enduser-centric view of what to expect when interacting with "openstack", driving ideally towards an identical experience. The tactics (driven by RefStack) were focused on making sure a minimal set of APIs were available in products allowed to call themselves "openstack", and try to grow that set over time. 2- Branding: an ecosystem-centric view of building a set of "compatible" products, driving ideally toward establishing a large marketplace. The tactics used for the first objective encouraged products to apply for the trademark programs, which was used as a funnel for the marketplace. As we enter the OIF era, are those end goals still valuable? Are trademarks the best tool to achieve them? Are there other key goals we should leverage trademarks for? Are the current tactics we use (Refstack and powered-by trademark programs) still valid ? -- Thierry Carrez (ttx)