Comment by circuit10
5 hours ago
Can you really demand someone not have any references to your product? Surely people are allowed to refer to it to explain their fork's relation to the original, otherwise it would also be illegal to compare your product against competitors in advertising or to review anything
I guess it depends on whether it's likely to confuse people?
As we speak, the Mac version's website is peppered with statements like:
> Is Notepad++ available for Mac?
> Yes. Notepad++ is now natively available for macOS as a free download.
That's over the line. This isn't a few tweaks to get it to compile on a Mac, but a wholesale rewrites of big chunks of it. It's a fork of Notepad++, but it's not the Notepad++.
This is where trademark law starts to get a little murky and the law will differ from country to country.