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“Bullied”? I mean, the open source app the trademarker wanted to replace wasn’t popular either, and I don’t see how the heck “kik” could be related to something for creating templates. Neither do I see it for messaging, but that is a trademark.
IMO, the dev was the asshole in that case.
Not in my book. They asked him if he would rename his package, he replied sorry but I'm building a project with this name, and they replied that they were going to send lawyers to do takedowns if he would release his project. This would also rub me the wrong way. Also, the dev was already working on the package before the kik company ever came to NPM. Why would he have to give up on the name for his project?
Like NPM said, I'd expect a package named kbin to be about kbin.social, not e.g. some random recycling app. The company wants to open source their stuff. That's great! And then, kik a bit selfishly doesn't want some package with only 1 star and 3 watches to confuse the 5 people who would want to look at the source code. NPM doesn't conflate versions between different packages formerly published under the same name, so virtually no harm done to existing users. People who want Kik's code would get to find Kik, and people would still be able to use the renamed project. I don't see a reason for the dev to hold on to their Kik name when it would do a slight bit of harm.
Though, maybe that's not how it turned out. NPM later took over Kik's package again as a security holding to this day, and whatever you think, it's not a good reaction to unpublish all your popular packages, causing massive code breakage around the world and Facebook going up in flames, prompting the world to reevaluate dependency chains and the world's dependency on JavaScript- that sounds kinda nice, actually, so maybe I'm glad this happened.
(also, he already released it)
I get that, but suppose you start a package on NPM named "bronk". Sometime later someone starts a company with that name. Should you just be forced to give up your package name, just because people suddenly associate the name with the company?
Azer’s repository for his package was made five years after Kik Messenger was released.