[typedb] and [typeql] are a bit generic. For instance, a quick search yields some unlaunched project that owns the domain name (I hope your legal-type peoples have that all sorted).
I created vaticle-typedb and gave you a synonym for both grakn and typedb (keeps people from making a generic tag and overlapping with anything else that might share the name).
I also made vaticle-typeql and gave you a synonym for both graql and typeql.
Rather than continue this in comments, let me see if I can explain this in detail and put the issue to rest.
As I noted above, someone has ostensibly laid claim to TypeQL (they registered that domain in 2016). They might not ever do anything with it, but I've seen more times than I care to count where someone else makes a project with the same name and suddenly the tag meaning changes because the new project is more popular than the old.
Vaticle is the first mover here so I'm trying to ensure than nobody else can confuse the tag usage. If you look at the synonyms, you'll note that attempting to tag [typedb] maps to this one. That ensures that Vaticle owns this term. Period. Nobody can take this tag away from you now.
The definition of a "trademarked term" means no one else is allowed to use the term.
I think you're missing something practical here: enforcement. "typedb" is a fairly generic thing (type + db). Assuming they give you the trademark, are you going to bet that nobody else ever comes up with this and starts some Open Source project with the same name? I'm trying to plan for how this impacts Stack Overflow because users can (and will) come here to ask about it (which eventually means more Meta posts, cleanup efforts, etc.)
You might own the trademark, but now you get to track folks down, send them scary lawyer letters and try to extricate your project from the meaning of the other(s). That takes time and effort (ask the Mozilla foundation how that went with changing from "Phoenix" to "Firefox"). And all that takes time and money. Time that people will still be mis-tagging things here, confusing projects, etc.
You don't see the TypeScript being tagged as "Microsoft TypeScript" do you?
No, but you're not comparing apples to apples. TypeScript has been around since 2012 and it's widely known now. The paint isn't even dry on your new corporate website, which still directs you to the old one with your old name. Oh, and we removed the [microsoft] tag as well
This isn't some sort of slight. I'm trying to think of how best to serve the community here and ensuring that your tag remains problem free. That's how we avoid tag confusion around here (see php-carbon, graphite-carbon and macos-carbon). The tag is as clear as I can make it for the users who will never even see the excerpt. Putting your name in front does that.