On 15 Jan 2015, at 11:56, Paweł Bylica <chfast at gmail.com>
wrote:>
> Can I state that my software/product used LLVM library? The license says
that
> "Neither the names of the LLVM Team, University of Illinois at
> Urbana-Champaign, nor the names of its contributors may be used to
> endorse or promote products derived from this Software without
specific
> prior written permission."
>
> If not, who can I ask for permission?
(I am not a lawyer, I am not *your* lawyer, this is not legal advice, if you
want legal advice, then talk to a lawyer).
This clause is common in BSD-style licenses. You can say that your project uses
LLVM, you can not say that LLVM endorses your product. Lots of projects that
use LLVM highlight the fact that they use LLVM as a selling point, but they can
not say that people should use their product because the LLVM team / UIUC thinks
it's great.
The point of clauses like this is to prevent people from brining the LLVM
project into disrepute by using the LLVM name to endorse things that LLVM
developers wouldn't be in favour of. To give the canonical example, if you
produce a baby-mulching machine that uses LLVM, then you are free to say that it
uses LLVM, but you can not imply that baby mulching is something that the LLVM
team approves of.
David