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Proper trademark attribution through trademark symbols and credit lines helps makes the public aware of our trademarks, and helps prevent them from becoming generic terms. Credit lines also help clarify that they belong to Oracle. Accordingly, Oracle would appreciate you attributing ownership of Oracle trademarks to Oracle Corporation by using trademark symbols (™ or SM or ®) and credit lines as detailed below.
Trademark Symbols
Use the ® symbol with the most prominent appearance of the "Oracle" mark on products, packaging, manuals, advertisements, promotional materials and Web pages (e.g., in the headline of an advertisement), and the first use of the mark in text or body copy. This includes situations where "Oracle" is a part of a product or service name (e.g., Oracle® Collaboration Suite, Oracle® PartnerNetwork). You do not need to use trademark symbols with other Oracle trademarks.
Example: XYZ Develops New Product for Oracle® Database
XYZ Corporation, a member of the Oracle® PartnerNetwork program, has developed the ABC software cartridge for use with the industry leading Oracle database. The ABC software cartridge is one of numerous products XYZ has developed that complement leading Oracle offerings.
"Oracle" receives a trademark symbol in the headline because this is the most prominent appearance, and when it appears as part of the "Oracle PartnerNetwork" name because this is the first appearance in text. While there is no trademark symbol after "Oracle" when it appears in front of the term "products" and "offerings" since we already used a symbol the first time that the term "Oracle" appeared in body copy. It is always acceptable to continue using the ® after "Oracle" throughout the document.
Credit Line
All products, packaging, manuals, advertisements, promotional materials and Web pages bearing Oracle trademarks should include the following trademark credit line.
"Oracle and Java are registered trademarks of Oracle and/or its affiliates. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners."
The credit line may appear anywhere on the collateral, but typically is displayed on a copyright page, the back of a package or at the end of a document or web page.
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