To introduce myself, I'm a representative from the lead organization for
the AsciiDoc Working Group (
https://www.eclipse.org/org/workinggroups/asciidoc-charter.php) and
Language Specification (
https://projects.eclipse.org/proposals/asciidoc-language) at the Eclipse
Foundation. I'm also the maintainer of the Asciidoctor project, which has
served as the steward for the AsciiDoc language.

As the AsciiDoc language specification gets underway under the umbrella of
the AsciiDoc Working Group, I'm curious to know how the process for
protecting the trademark works (in this case, AsciiDoc). One of the main
reasons we chose the Eclipse Foundation to host the specification is to
prevent the AsciiDoc name from being used in ways that dilute its meaning.

To cite a concrete example, we received the following announcement on the
AsciiDoc WG list about a new project named asciidoc-hs that aims to develop
a new processor for AsciiDoc. Here's that message:

https://www.eclipse.org/lists/asciidoc-wg/msg00110.html

I want to state right up front that we in no way want to discourage this
effort. The goal of the AsciiDoc WG is to encourage the creation of
multiple implementations. However, right now, there's no official spec or
TCK in place for the AsciiDoc language, so it's not possible for a library
to claim it parses AsciiDoc (apart from grandfathered projects like
Asciidoctor and AsciiDoc Python). And since the project cannot yet
self-certify as compliant, our understanding is that the trademark
"asciidoc" cannot be used in the name.

What's the process for handling this situation? Will the Eclipse Foundation
help with situations like this? How serious is the Eclipse Foundation about
protecting its trademarks? How do we communicate with the project
maintainer(s) that the AsciiDoc name cannot be used until the software is
compliant with the spec (which depends on the existence of a TCK)? And in
what way can the name be used once it is?

I look forward to your guidance.

Sincerely,

Dan Allen

p.s. We have a similar issue with libasciidoc, found at
https://github.com/bytesparadise/libasciidoc.

-- 
Dan Allen, Vice President | OpenDevise Inc.
Pronouns: he, him, his
Content ∙ Strategy ∙ Community
opendevise.com
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