Rights to the Emoji

Mark Davis ☕️ mark at macchiato.com
Mon Oct 12 00:46:51 CDT 2015


The twitter images are open sourced, I believe.

{phone}
On Oct 12, 2015 02:56, "Shervin Afshar" <shervinafshar at gmail.com> wrote:

> Those listed in the column titled "Native" come from the operating system
> (in your case, Mac OS X) and/or browser you are viewing that page on. One
> can assume that the right to those belong to the entity who develops those
> software.
>
> A safer approach for you would be to use symbols from Emoji One[1]; if you
> can attribute that project on your products, you can use them for free; if
> you can not do that, they require that you contact them for a custom paid
> license [2].
>
> Also, with the paid license you are helping a project publishing content
> under Creative Common license.
>
> [1]: http://emojione.com/
> [2]: http://emojione.com/faq#faq5
>
> ↪ Shervin
>
> On Sat, Oct 10, 2015 at 5:59 AM, patapatachakapon . <
> bugraaydin1999 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I work for a small company in Turkey. We would like to import/sell
>> products that have pictures of Emoji on them (such as keychains, cups etc.)
>> , here in Turkey. The Emoji we would like to use on our products are the
>> ones that are titled Native on the chart that I've attached to this email.
>> I would like to know whether or not it's required to buy the rights these
>> Emoji. Are Emoji copyrighted, or can they be used by anyone for design
>> purposes?
>>
>> Thanks so much in advance!
>>
>
>
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