And that's not really sufficient; words have a life of their own and take on contextual meanings outside of whatever scope they're introduced in. Case in point, linear types come from linear logic, by Girard, whereas relevant types come from unrelated older work by Belnap and Anderson. The simple act of putting them under one umbrella term, "substructural types", erases the older work and means that the article will focus more on Girard's perspective of logic.
Then the article makes the "discovery" that "People who say they want Linear™ Types In Rust actually just want Proper Support For Relevant™ Types.", which is pretty obvious if you know this historical context, and coins yet another term, must-use types, which unsurprisingly has no ™ after it.
I think I get what you're trying to do, I myself used ™ for a little bit back 6-7 years ago, a little bit before I wrote http://insearchoftheultimateprogramming.blogspot.com/2011/04.... But ™ just isn't effective; even if you think you know what a term means, you can't explain it except by its relationship to other terms. And once you forget what that ™ symbol referred to you're just as clueless as everyone else. Whereas URLs are "resource locators" and actually clarify what you intended.