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There are at least three issues to be considered: First is the licensing aspect of using the image. In order for an image to be used at Wikipedia, the image must be unambiguously licensed to be compatible with Wikipedia's free-use licenses, which are CC BY-SA and GFDL.
In regard to uploading company logo images, please note the guidelines at Wikipedia:Logos.Two relevant guidelines state: "Logos that contain corporate slogans should be omitted in favour of equivalent logos that do not", and "Generally, logos should be used only when the company and its logo are reasonably familiar".
The content is not a software logo, diagram or screenshot that is extracted from a GFDL software manual. GFDL content may still be usable under the non-free content policy. If a work that is not a derivative work with a GFDL license is used under a non-free rationale it does not have to be scaled down, but other non-free limitations will still ...
Owner – Who owns the logo, if different than article name. Full legal name is best. Website – If taken from the web, where? Commentary – Discuss any commentary in the article about the logo itself; History – If logo is discontinued or modified, when and how was it used historically; Description – Additional information about the logo
Logos should not be used in contexts which are, taken as a whole, strongly negative. It is generally acceptable to use a logo in an article about what the logo represents (such as a company or organization), or in an article discussing the logo itself, its history and evolution, or the visual style of the logo's creator.
In 1973 Pons left the music industry to become the film and video director for the New York Jets football team; he designed the team's 1978–97 team logo. [5] [6] He held this position until around the year 2000. [7] Pons and his family moved to Jacksonville, Florida in 2005, where he did game day video for the Jacksonville Jaguars, until he ...
This was the first logo officially named the "Pepsi Globe". The design was refined in August 2003 when the typeface was updated and the Pepsi Globe became more detailed. This version remained mostly the same in 2008 when Pepsi redesigned the packaging once more to show different backgrounds on each can, though the color remained blue.
This logo image consists only of simple geometric shapes or text. It does not meet the threshold of originality needed for copyright protection, and is therefore in the public domain. Although it is free of copyright restrictions, this image may still be subject to other restrictions.