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Programming Google Open Source

Developer Requests Google Remove Their Logo From Re-Designed Golang Page (github.com) 113

Slashdot reader DevNull127 writes: Another very minor kerfuffle has broken out in the community for the Go programming language. When its official Twitter account asked for feedback on the new look of its web site, one developer suggested that it had been a mistake to add the Google logo to the lower-right of the home page. "A lot of people associate it with a commercial Google product."

Following the suggested procedure, he then created an issue on GitHub. ("Go is perceived by some as a pure Google project without community involvement. Adding a Google logo does not help in this discussion.") The issue received 61 upvotes (and 30 downvotes), eventually receiving a response from Google software engineer Andrew Bonventre, the engineering lead on the Go Team.

"Thanks for the issue. We spent a long time talking about it and are sensitive to this concern. It's equally important to make it clear that Google supports Go, which was missing before (Much like typescriptlang.org). Google pays for and hosts the infrastructure that golang.org runs on and we hope the current very small logo is a decent compromise." He then closed the issue.

The developer who created the issue then responded, "I get that you've discussed this internally. This is a great opportunity to discuss it with the community. I'm thankful to Google for financing the initial and ongoing development of Go but Google is not the only company investing [in] Go. I would like to move the Google logo into an separate section, together will the major stakeholders of the project."

In a later comment he added "I value Google's participation in Go and I'm not arguing to change that. Having the Google logo in the corner of each golang.org page suggests that this is a pure Google project when it is not..."

For some perspective, another Go developer had also suggested "animate the gopher's eyes on the website."

"Thanks, but we're not going to do this," responded the engineering lead on the Go Team. "We've discussed it before and it would be way too distracting."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Developer Requests Google Remove Their Logo From Re-Designed Golang Page

Comments Filter:
  • Suck it up (Score:1, Informative)

    As long a Google wants it, it is a Google product, pure and simple. And putting their mark on it means they want it, no matter who else contributes. If you don't want to work for Google for free, find another language to support. If you don't want to do that, suck it up buttercup.
    • Suck it up! As long as Sco and Bell Labs now AT&T want c/c++, it is a Sco and AT&T product, pure and simple. ...find another language to support as clang,gcc are not licensed.

      • Do SCO and Bell Labs control the c/c++ compiler code repositories? No?

        Google controls the golang repository and every little detail of the platform development, completely and utterly. And I must say, the result of that is more than a little underwhelming compared to a genuinely innovative project like Rust, entirely owned by its contributors.

    • by 605dave ( 722736 )

      Yeah, there's no way a big corporation would create something, open source it, then NOT try to brand it.

      https://swift.org/ [swift.org]

    • by Anonymous Coward

      So would you also support Microsoft placing a prominent Microsoft logo on every GitHub page (including GoLang's)? After all, Microsoft own GitHub and therefore pay for/own everything on GitHub and if you don't like that you can suck it up, buttercup.

  • I would think it is becoming pretty apparent, people of better spirit do not want to be tainted by the well, icky, Google logo, you know, lay down with dogs, expect to get fleas. Nasty little critters that invade your privates, bite into in and try to suck the life out of it.

    Having the google logo there is not seen as a measure of HUMAN digital rights, of respect of privacy, a respect for freedom of speech, any 'OPINION' allowed (no freedom when it comes to the false expression of facts, you are free to ex

    • by evis ( 5623144 )
      "(no freedom when it comes to the false expression of facts, you are free to express your opinion, not lie about facts)" A tangent but you have to be able to question facts in order to determine what the facts are. Scientists have to challenge each others' conclusions to determine what becomes theory. Even a prominent theory has to be repeatedly challenged to ensure it still holds. There is no way to arbitrarily know what is fact, it has be researched and questioned and even after you can define a fact
  • by pele ( 151312 )

    When Sun and subsequently Oracle do it they they are evil, but when Google, or whatever their name for tax purposes is, does it then it's OK?

    • Funny they don't mind Google now setting web standards but I can only imagine the reaction here if Microsoft did it :-)

      • No need to imagine, just dig back to 97-98 when ie came out and see all the fuss that's been kicked up around bgsound and marquee and whatnot...valign I think too..

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 14, 2019 @04:08AM (#58922766)

    The fact that google discussed this "internally" and then "closed" the ticket without further discussion makes the point pretty clear that GO does belong to Google, and nobody else matters.

    • This comment basically sums it up completely. You can call it a "community driven" or whatever BS term you want but at the end of the day it's not an impartial committee or an unaffiliated individual controlling things - it's Google. Go, Swift, and to a slightly lesser degree Java are languages that are in all practicality the product of a specific corporation, and if you think otherwise you're a fool.

  • that what go stands for? Google Only?

  • by LordHighExecutioner ( 4245243 ) on Sunday July 14, 2019 @05:02AM (#58922880)
    From the post:
    Another very minor kerfuffle has broken out in the community for the Go programming language.

    From old post [slashdot.org]:
    'Kerfuffle' Erupts Around Newly-Proposed try() Feature For Go Language

    Just rename Go to Kerfuffle, and stop whining.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Google should rename it 'Go Fuck Yourself'

    • Nah I'd rather rename it to covfefe.

    • by c ( 8461 )

      Just rename Go to Kerfuffle, and stop whining.

      'Whiners whine as Kerfuffle errupts from Go fork!'

  • Never trust a language that is defined by a reference implementation with contributions coming from one main source.
  • Read the top section of this file. It details WHO has earned the right to contribute, spells out how Google employees are handled, and...Google owns the Copyright.

    So, yeah, itâ(TM)s a Google project. Or, itâ(TM)s being supported, predominantly, by Google.

    https://golang.org/CONTRIBUTOR... [golang.org]

  • I'm not seeing how this is such a bad compromise on Google's part. If you don't like Google that you're prerogative but your personal likes and dislikes are irrelevant.

    If you don't like Google putting a small logo because it might mischaracterize their relationship, I'm sure they'll be happy to put "Sponsored by Google" or some such with a large logo.

  • Go is not really a general-purpose language. It is aimed at a very specific development and deployment model that is apparently pretty much what Google uses these days. It is rather limited when you want to do something else. Hence I would leave that logo in as a warning.

  • Google pays for and hosts the infrastructure that golang.org runs on and we hope the current very small logo is a decent compromise.

    If you take the King's coin, you are the King's man.

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