This page gives some informal guidance on how Fedora communities in different locales can establish Internet domains with the word "Fedora" in them. The Fedora trademark guidelines have specific requirements that must be met for setting up these domains, in order to preserve the value of the Fedora trademarks.
Why a local domain?
Not every local community requires a local domain. Many local communities can function perfectly well in the existing Fedora Project domain(s). Fedora already offers the ability for communities to provide complete translations for our main web site and other pages. We are also working on the capability to have a translated MediaWiki that will not require as much manual work on the part of translators.
In addition, splitting off a domain has the tendency to keep local community members from getting up to date information that flows on the official Fedora channels. It multiplies the number of areas a community member needs to monitor and thus takes away from the time they could otherwise spend on contribution directly to Fedora.
However, there are some good reasons for local domains to exist, and the Fedora Project realizes the importance of enabling the community to grow Fedora in localities around the world. Therefore we have a few options available to people who want to set up a domain to support this effort.
Pre-purchased domain
The Fedora Project or Red Hat can buy a domain and arrange for it to be pointed to the fedoraproject.org domain name servers. Since we control those name servers, it is very easy for the Infrastructure team to then point to the appropriate community server(s).
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Self-purchased domain
Communities may purchase their own domains, but only after receiving a trademark license from Red Hat, pursuant to the trademark guidelines.
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