FWIW, at CouchOne, we used “Your Data, anywhere.” for a while. There are no claims attached to this as far as I can tell, and we could derive from that.
> On 31 Oct 2014, at 11:05 , Alexander Shorin <kxe...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 12:10 PM, Andy Wenk <a...@nms.de> wrote: >> On 31 October 2014 09:34, Alexander Shorin <kxe...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 11:29 AM, Nick North <nort...@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> Your data - everywhere - all the time >>> >>> Squatted: https://pragprog.com/news/new-page >>> >>> P.S. Hi Nick! (: >>> >> >> I am a musician and I write a lot of music these days. What I don't like is >> stealing music from others. What I accept in a way is copying music when >> the editor is adding his own style (e.g. a cover). What I do like a lot is >> be inspired by the work of other musicians. With that I show my respect for >> their music. >> >> There will always be a slogan or sentence already used. I don't think we >> will find one, that is not used in a way in the are we are working. So for >> me it is totally ok to be inspired by slogans other people already created. >> And the case Alex mentioned above is not a problem for me. But that's my >> personal opinion .... > > Collisions with slogans is more sensitive than offending someone by > uncanny decisions. While you may ignore someone feelings you couldn't > ignore lawyers which would be very happy to punish you for every > branding mistake. > > Music is a little bit different planet and there are different rules > for it, but also imho (: > > -- > ,,,^..^,,,