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  • ares623 6 minutes

    (posting my comment from the other thread) Hilarious. How long does it take to vibecode the requests to change the logo and name. Vibecoding a port from scratch is super fast as long as you don't need permission huh. Then when the adults ask you to not infringe on copyright, it's all "please be patient guys. I am boy. Give me one week pls."

  • karel-3d 1 hours

    The app seems to be entirely vibe-coded. ("multi-agent AI development workflows are what make a one-person project at this scale practical")

    However the author says he will "move from the branding".

  • HelloUsername 1 hours

    Related discussions:

    "Notepad++ for Mac – Independent community port" https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47916964 27-apr-2026 85 comments

    "Notepad++ Code Editor Comes to Mac After 20-Year Wait" https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47947740 29-apr-2026 36 comments

  • andai 27 minutes

    Not to be confused with

    https://notepadexe.com/

  • gverrilla 16 minutes

    It's the Trump pattern: break all rules to benefit yourself until someone or something stops you. USA has not yet reached this clarity.

  • krzyzanowskim 51 minutes

    becase there is only one Notepad.exe https://notepadexe.com on the mac

  • omblivion 1 hours

    It is astonishing how blatant people can be. How do they imagine they won't be immediately called out?

    Hopefully the domain and the app on the app store gets taken down soon.

    odie5533 2 minutes

    He probably didn't know it was trademarked, and probably didn't think people would get upset, and he's now trying to make it right. Why assume malice on this guy?

  • x187463 40 minutes

    Just needs to update the site to make it clear it's an independent port of the project. Then, modify the name to MacPad++ or something. Good to go.

    LeCompteSftware 35 minutes

    To be clear in the GitHub thread Don Ho repeatedly encouraged him to do this, and said it was cool that he was trying to bring Notepad++ to Mac! Just don't make it look like Don Ho and the rest of the team is responsible for any quality issues. Don't use the logo!

    "Objective-Notepad" was right there.

    ErroneousBosh 28 minutes

    > "Objective-Notepad" was right there.

    It still is. There's only a handful of hits on Google for that, too.

    You should do it. I'd do it if I had a Mac and used Notepad++ ;-)

  • f3408fh 54 minutes

    FFS. I installed it after seeing it here on HN and on MacRumors. Terrible failure on my part but MacRumors should offer an apology for endorsing this fake release.

    nguyenkien 47 minutes

    First thing I do is check official notepad++ website. I didn't see anything, that what's stop me.

    f3408fh 44 minutes

    Smart. Good on you for noticing it wasn’t the real website.

    AureliusMA 39 minutes

    This is such a blow for MacRumors... I won't be taking them seriously anymore after this. They are complicit.

    odie5533 1 minutes

    The National Enquirer publishing rumors and gossip?! I'll never read them again!

    f3408fh 20 minutes

    Me neither. So far all I see is a puny "[Updated]" title on the article with no apology or indication of what was updated.

    pndy 12 minutes

    An apology? That'd be... breaking news /s

  • FinnKuhn 57 minutes

    Using the trademark is one thing. The authors brazen reaction another: https://github.com/notepad-plus-plus/notepad-plus-plus/issue...

    pjc50 34 minutes

    AI means never having to ask permission. Or forgiveness, it seems.

    f3408fh 42 minutes

    The disclaimer he put up on the website is comical. "In coordination with [original author], I will be _evolving the brand_ to …"

    bartread 32 minutes

    > I wanted is to bring Notepad++ to mac and allow people to find Mac version of Notepad++ quickly and use it.

    Seems he’s ignorant of the ecosystem too (or possibly disingenuous, or maybe doesn’t realise he’s done something wrong or why). Notepad++ runs perfectly on macOS under Wine. I’ve been using it that way for two or three years now. Wasn’t a struggle to set up either: I simply ran the installer as if I was running Windows and then it #justworked.

    LeCompteSftware 44 minutes

    "I will give you one week to change the name."

    "No, I'm not going to do that."

    "Okay fine, I'll report you to Cloudflare now."

    "BROOOOOOOO you said you'd give me a week?!?!"

    ssl-3 25 minutes

    It looks like it went more like this:

    "Stop using my trademark." [1]

    "OK, give me a couple of weeks. I was intending to expand your brand." [2]

    "No. I've reported this to your CDN." [3]

    ---

    [1]: This is the correct way to handle things.

    [2]: This has the appearance of being evidence of -deliberate- fuckery.

    [3]: This kind of action is the inevitable result of deliberate fuckery.

    ares623 8 minutes

    We have found the limits of agentic engineering. Changing a logo on a website apparently takes weeks.

    as1mov 22 minutes

    Funny how the vibe-coding speed grinds to 0 the moment people catch on to their bullshit. A name change requires a week but shitting out 200 commits with Claude takes barely a month.

    doginasuit 29 minutes

    That response doesn't seem brazen. It sounds like they had a deeply mistaken understanding of what an open source license grants and believed it would be fine to use the name and branding as well as the code. Unless I missed it, it sounds like they are changing how their site communicates its relationship to the original source.

    What I find baffling about that conversation are the people having their LLMs weigh in on what the author should have done. Verbal takedown by LLM is a new level of cringe.

    Edit: There are some replies I hadn't seen, their confusion and request for patience sounds like they still don't fully appreciate their mistake.

    Semaphor 22 minutes

    It sounds brazen and incredibly entitled. The LLM response seems fitting for a vibe coded project with a vibe brain author.

    47282847 47 minutes

    To me he sounds inexperienced/naive and a little scared (and thus “defensive”) but well-intentioned. His response makes me believe that he didn’t do it for fame, to deceive, or other selfish reasons.

    cryptonym 18 minutes

    First step would be taking down the website, second step is an apology, third step is bringing back online with new branding and eventually a final word to thank them, share the link and say they remain open to criticism.

    It's not rocket science. Pretty sure even his LLM would give that strategy and implement it without burning too many tokens.

    More than inexperienced, either he really can't read a room or he knows very well what he is doing.

    AureliusMA 40 minutes

    I don't believe that he is naive. It looks like he wants to use the Notepad++ brand authority to capture the notepad++ macos market (which is big!) Thus he is infringing on a trademark for his own benefit.

    LeCompteSftware 36 minutes

    The smarmy dishonesty about "expanding the Notepad++ brand" actually is selfish and ill-intentioned. Perhaps he is too young and naive to fully understand that he is being parasitic. But naivety is a well-travelled path towards malice.

    Regardless, he absolutely deserves to be shamed on GitHub for this. I don't like the online culture of public shame and sandbagging - I think this GitHub thread should be closed now that it's viral - but sometimes people actually do things they should be ashamed of. This needs to be a tough lesson.

    pndy 19 minutes

    I don't wanna be rude but it looks like this guy just arrived on the Internet this year - around March-April and it doesn't seem like he has any prior activity. He just decided to roll this Notepad++ for macOS and that's it

    Also, his medium avatar looks awfully generated.

    RobotToaster 1 minutes

    It reads to me like English isn't his first language.

    f3408fh 39 minutes

    A malicious actor would be happy to be publicly labeled inexperienced/naive.

    doginasuit 15 minutes

    That reasoning holds but it is not based on any of the facts at hand. There's a reason why any community worth being apart of has a tendency to assume good faith. People make mistakes. I respect Don Ho's response and I don't see how the pitchfork brigade is bringing anything valuable to the situation.

    f3408fh 8 minutes

    If you’d actually installed it and realized afterward that you’d been misled, whether by someone who doesn’t understand trademarks or someone acting in bad faith, you’d probably feel differently. Leaving a comment on HN in that situation is a pretty reasonable reaction.

  • RedShift1 44 minutes

    Is notepad++ a registered trademark?

    AureliusMA 40 minutes

    Yes

    voidUpdate 39 minutes

    yes https://data.inpi.fr/marques/FR5133202

    FinnKuhn 34 minutes

    So, it's a French trademark. Not a lawyer, but from what I remember trademarks need to be registered in every region you want to enforce them in separately.

    If the author of "Notepad++ for Mac" doesn't happen to be French as well, is there anything (legally) preventing them from using this trademark?

    voidUpdate 30 minutes

    If a mac user is in France, does the software they use have to abide by French laws?

    mr_toad 22 minutes

    You can enforce an unregistered trademark, but you need evidence that it’s actually yours. Registration makes that easier.

    IshKebab 24 minutes

    That's not correct. You don't have to register a trademark in order for it to be protected, it's just recommended because if you do register it you don't have to separately prove that you have built up brand reputation. That should be pretty easy for a project as old and well-known as this though.

    ssl-3 10 minutes

    You're correct.

    In very, very broad US-centric* strokes: Using a mark in trade is enough to establish a defensible trademark.

    Registering a trademark can be useful, but it is also optional. At very least, registration helps make the ownership of the mark easier to discover and this can help everyone start on the right foot.

    (* I'm not familiar at all with the laws of France, but that's fine: The alleged violation happened in New York.)