I decided to see if I could print one with an Apple logo at PCBWay and so far they haven’t rejected it. It’s quite a bit more expensive...
PCBWay spends too much money on marketing, failing to realize just as many people know about them as JLCPCB. And JLC doesn't do a lot of marketing that I can see. That's why you see all these YouTubers pitching PCBWay. PCBWay even approached me a year ago by email, and I replied back saying that most of the viewers of my channel might buy 1-2pcs of a PCB, but a MOQ of 5pcs doesn't make a lot of sense for the average hobbyist, or even for me. That was my rather pointed way of telling them No. (I don't allow YouTube Ads on my channel either, so it's not like I have something against PCBWay.)
However, despite the fact the techno-geek world has gone mad over JLC due to its lower pricing (compared to PCBWay), your statement indicates there may be some merit to PCBWay if indeed they will offer vintage Mac hobbyists more liberty when it comes to the Apple logo on 3D prints.
T-shirts are the same scenario. I had some shirts printed up at Printful, initially for my own personal use. The first one slipped through with a tiny Apple logo, but others were nabbed. "Macintosh" text? Nope. They eventually banned just about everything, except for some vintage photos they probably were unfamiliar with. So after designing
my Bill Atkinson T-shirt remake, I gave that design to Javier Rivera at 8-Bit Tees, and he's printing it just fine.
(No money was exchanged, nor kickbacks to me. I gifted Javier the design because, hey, it's just a remake of someone else's original design, and I want people to find it and be able to enjoy it. I did take some creative liberties though. For example I created the back design and the little graphic on the wearer’s right sleeve because those are not visible in the old photos of Bill Atkinson wearing that T-shirt.)
The point here is that when cloning 1980's vintage Apple stuff, it looks downright silly or odd if the Apple logo is excluded. Sure, you've got the wannabe lawyers out there banging on the legalities, but if you nitpick that much, you probably would decry "realoaded" boards or even Macintosh Garden. Sure glad Mark Jozaitis just plows ahead with his clear case remakes. His Apple IIc cases are great, and they even come with a color-striped Apple logo made in metal, with 2-sided tape on back, so you can affix it to the top of his cases and make them look 100% authentic (just in a different color). Funny thing about the MacEffects clearcases. There was one Apple keynote video where the engineering department had an SE/30 in a MacEffects clearcase in the shot. So even Apple likes Mark's stuff.
