OSI Approves Three New Licenses
Russ Nelson writes: "In our monthly board meeting this past Wednesday, the Open Source Initiative approved three new licenses for use with OSI Certified Open Source Software: the W3C
license, the Motosoto license,
and the Open
Group Test Suite License. In other action, one license was voted down because it violated the discrimination clause of the Open Source
Definition. Another (the RTSP) was
withdrawn because the license-discuss mailing list convinced the
submittor that it wasn't ready. And one (the DSPL) goes back to
license-discuss because we disagree with their analysis and want to
re-negotiate it with them. Several people have suggested that we post the licenses that we have turned down, and explain just why they don't comply with the Open Source Definition. We don't want to discourage people from submitting licenses, knowing that their license might be held up for public notice. We'd rather encourage people with non-compliant licenses to fix them so they are compliant."
If anything will be the downfall of OSS, it is the multitude of licenses. It will cost companies too much in attorney's fees to be worth their trouble. How many licenses do we need?
Soon Microsoft will be able to claim their software is open.
I say it's time for another software revolution to maintain the purity of thought and our precious bodily liquids!
Maybe there could be a way that people could be asked if their licenses could be posted. After all, it would be nice to see what traps some licenses fall into when trying to modify an existing license to fit the OSD.
of alphabet soup? I think we have more than enough licenses as it is; mod me flamebait if you wish, but we already have so many licenses as to create this odd mystique around the OSS community and keep people from diving right in and feeling the code. This whole licensing mess gave birth to the term "potentially viral software" and I think the main thing the community and the world at large needs is to get back to coding and stop writing the small print.
Want Linux games? HERE.
...to the Motosoto license doesn't work.
At least, it didn't for me.
proof of Osama's guilt..
try this: Motosoto Community
More open licences give more freedom, in the sense
that developers have a greater choice over which freedoms they want to give and which they wish to keep.
Not everyone agrees with RMS's philosophy, so we
need alternatives.
Although IMHO the GPL is the best licence out there.
Here is a working link to the Motosoto liscense: http://www.motosoto.org/ARCHIVES/0/1/mosl.html
Here is a link to the current list of OSI liscenses: http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/license-list.html
the byproduct of years of oppression by the white man
Open source means that you open up your intelectual property so that other can use it without fees and add their own contribution.
That's exactly what's happening here:
People take the sources of other peoples open source licences, modify them and redistribute them without having to pay any silly license fees.
So, you see the great sucess of open source here: many different licenses exist now and compete with each other and all time new licenses are created.
Some people might say now this is bad because there might be holes which evil guys can abuse, but because the license is open at once a new license is created without the hole and evil men have no chance !!!
So don't believe Microsoft with their evil anti-open source FUD: nobody uses the MS licenses beside MS themselves anymore, because they are closed and they will fail. Soon all licenses will be open source licenses because that's the only licenses people can fit to their needs wihtout paying big bucks !
And laywers can still make money just be providing advice for the licenses without needing to charge fees for the original licenses !!!
Owner of a Mensa membership card.
Just as a license to kill for everyone would mean more freedom on paper but not in practise.
Not everyone agrees with RMS's philosophy
Yeah. Like Microsoft.
I'm sick of you people trying to drag us all back into the trap of closed software with all these so called "open source" licenses.
Has anyone done a comparison of all these OSLs (similar to diff)? I'd be curious to see the results. (Might also help others trying to make sense of all these licenses too)
Perhaps what we are seeing here, is not YAOSL, but rather, the license itself being rewritten in the only medium offered to it... re-release with changes, under a new name.
Just a thought...
Why not hold them up to public inspection, show why a license was turned down, and what the implications of the offending clauses were. If they archive the communications with the license authors, it may be usefull to show what the real intent of the authors was down the road in case of disputes. In a world where the shrink-wrapped you gotta agree to it before you even see it license reins supreme, I'd find this refreshing
Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
...
For Microsoft, there's BSD.
For everyone else, there's GPL.
I for one, as the author of the DSPL, the license that is going back for further discussion, would love to hear what slashdot people think about it. I can't comment on the others, but it is rather a departure from the traditional open source license...
The FSF's definition of Free Software requires that "A free program must be available for commercial use".
A company that submits a license should not have to worry about getting flooded with flames since their license did not pass..
Looking for any old 8-bit Heathkit/Zenith software/hardware - http://heathkit.garlanger.com
This depends on the attitude with which it is presented, doesn't it? Compare: "These proprietary wannabes tried to muscle in with the following restrictions" with "We felt the OSI model and the requirements imposed by these business plans were incompatible in the following points"
Sure, there's *always* trolls who take offense at business plans on some misguided principle, but anyone who counts will take it as it's meant: a simple lesson in OSI compatibility.
wtf was wrong with just marking it 'freeware'?
update comments set karma=-1, reason='offtopic' where sid=26315
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful for non-hobos, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU eneral Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. Hobos should include a photo ID, proof of citizenship, and funds in the amount of $500 payable to Free Software Foundation, Inc.
If you didnt understand this so is it like this:
Open Source Software != Free Software
Aren't licenses for software commonly open to public viewing on the website and/or package of the product/software anyway? Whats the big deal of showing off the licenses which dont comply?
Brielle
The clause used in that license is the same as the one used in the Artistic License. A "reasonable copying fee" could, in reality be an "outrageous copying fee" or more commonly the software can be bundled with something else for which you charge a "ludicrous proprietary fee".
/., the streets will run red with the blood of chickens. Why chickens? Because VA Chicken Processing just opened a new plant there and agreed to give everybody free chickens. They expect profitability by 2008.
So in this regard it's essentially the same as the Artistic License. I would criticize them for lifting material from the AL, possibly the most vague, unprofessional, IANAL license of all time.
ObSuicide: CmdrTaco is a big fat penis, I spit on
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
well, they can refrain from posting the licenses so that the community does not flame the companies. But what is stopping you from showing us your license?
Just to clarify: The Motosoto license is different from the Monsanto license. The biotech giant will sue you for growing crops using their patented genes, even if the genes got into your crops because of cross-contamination from neighbors fields. Even if you don't want to grow genetically modified crops, and you don't use roundup (a monsanto herbicide - their plants have genes that make them resistant to this, so you can spray it indiscriminately and kill only weeds), they still sue. More monsanto info.
It's almost as if the people behind nimda demanded money from you for running their copyrighted software! The sad thing, this is a very good comparison. Genetically modified organic crops are worth much less than pure organic.
HIV Crosses Species Barrier... into Muppets
Yes everybody and his dog now wants his own pet licence ! this poses licence compatibility, and makes every project isolated in it's own galaxy, it withdraws a lot of the benefices of Open Source where many projects share their source too.
Soon we will have a kind an open source Babel tower where every project has it's own licence but communicate with others. Talk about an oxymoron
Before posting the licenses for public review, remove the company's name and any other identifiable information.
I for one, as the author of the DSPL, the license that is going back for further discussion, would love to hear what slashdot people think about it. I can't comment on the others, but it is rather a departure from the traditional open source license...
:)
:)
:) and I haven't spent hours poring over it of course so things I've seen as potential problems may be addressed better than I took in.
Well, the whole executive committee and merit share holders thing gave the impression of over complexity to me and I doubt it'll be used widely, but I think that scheme is the heart of the licence so I'm sure you want to keep it
One particular point was it seemed to revolve around having elections for every public release of the software, so far as I could see this would mean holding elections for every bug fix. I'm probably reading it too strictly but then there doesn't seem much point in a (quite substantial) written licence unless it's expected to be strictly adhered to.
Is the thing about not being allowed to charge for the software itself important? If I understand correctly you mean I couldn't say "I will charge you $100 for this software" but I could say "I will charge you $100 for making a copy of this software for you" or something like that. If I've got that right, what's achieved by this and would you really want to be in the position of policing it?
The GPL's approach of letting people charge what they want seems to have much the same practical effect given than market forces will bring down the price of freely redistributable software unless you can add some extra value.
I'm not sure it's a good idea to include your interpretation of patent laws:
"While it is not in general illegal to produce or distribute software such as this that uses patented methods, it may be illegal to use such software for any purposes other than 'private experimentation'."
You might be right, I don't know, but I can't see you need to say it in the software licence just include the part about it being their responsibility to comply with the law. I don't know from reading it whether you were thinking of a particular jurisdiction (the USA maybe?) or all countries signed up to particular treaties or what. Stating what the law is "in general" in a licence that presumably may be used internationally doesn't seem like a good idea to me. You may be inadvertently misleading some people.
I think the part about being able to make derivatives licensed under the GPL was good, given the state of the "market" it seems good to me to allow redistribution under one of the leading licences but then I like the GPL and I expect some will disagree
Something I did find odd was that after specifying that derivatives could be under DSPL or GPL it then talks about pre-release versions being under a licence that prohibits further distribution, but with no real limits on what that licence might otherwise say - should this only be valid for a limited period or something?
I'm not sure on the effectiveness of the final clause about using the software as a library. So far as I can see you can take software not released as a library, adapt it so it is now a library, release that library yourself under the DSPL and then link to it in exactly the way that (it seems to me) you're trying to prohibit.
Okay, that was just a series of thoughts probably not entirely coherent that occurred to me as I read throught it. I hope I haven't sounded too negative, I guess I was looking for problems
Good luck with your licence.
After casually reading the Motosoto license, I could not find a significant difference between its terms and those of the GNU Lesser GPL. Anyone care to point out how this is different from LGPL?
Will I retire or break 10K?
That looks like freedom to me. Uniformization is not always good. If you can't read the licenses of everything that you run while actually caring about them, then you shouldn't be running the software.
This big building with three large black neon letters in the topleft corner: 'O', 'S', 'I'. The 'S' is blinking, the other two are out. The camera zooms in and moves focus to one of the building windows. It's thick with dust, so we only get a vague view on the inside.
And inside, there's a table with 1 cm of dust on it. Around this table are some chairs. Just as many mummies are sitting upon these chairs with their heads on the table, spider rags going from their heads to the table and back again.
Then suddenly one of these heads rises. A low, low voice speaks.
"Guys, people haven't really heard from us lately. Let's approve some licenses, or something."
The other mummy heads also rise from the table. Mumbling. "Yeah, good idea."
;-)
"We can confirm that Debian does *not* ship the version with the trojan horse. Our version predates it." [CA-2002-28]
That's kinda stupid, as a lot of important projects, like Sendmail and BIND, are BSD licensed, and others, like XFree86 and Apache, follow similar licenses. If you don't like the BSD license, fine, but at least acknowledge its importance to the free software community.
precious bodily fluids
Are the bodily fluids of the Eloi people (i.e. the people that H. G. Wells wrote about in The Time Machine and which are also depicted in Precious Moments figurines) significantly different in composition from those of a typical A.D. 2001 American?
Will I retire or break 10K?
What should happen if OSI software supports plugins (note patented software is just a special case of this) and external scripting languages which themselves are not OSI? You cannot insist that they follow the same licensing. Take a look at GE Medical which embeds Tcl/TK within their medical instruments. I doubt whether they will kindly open up their IP.
Also if the software goes kaput (or bought out) for any reason, what should the contrib community code licensing do (considering the legal entity holding the original OSI does not exist). If I was a Gate-2.0 I would conceive of an ingeneous bait and switch tactic where the original stuff was OSI but then deliberately strangle the legal holder and change the terms of the now rootless software as individuals with forks won't have the resources to compete.
If you celebrate Xmas, befriend me (538
Recently I attended a forum on interoperability of EDA (electronic design automation) tools that was hosted by Synopsys (one of the big companies in that field) at which Bruce Perens gave the keynote speech. They seemed to be rather enthusiastic about open source, and have released certain data formats (and supporting code) under a so-called open source license. I've read this license and it seems to be pretty good, but I'm not an expert in licensing. I was hoping to see if OSI had anything to say about it, but the Synopsys license doesn't seem to be on their "approved" list. Is this because it hasn't been evaluated yet, or because it's been rejected? I tried looking at the archived mailing list, but there was no search function and I didn't feel like navigating through months of archives.
If anyone from OSI (esp Bruce) is reading this, I'd be ever so pleased if you could respond. Thanks.
There's never a license fee, or cover charge, at ScaredCity ?tm/p?
Thank's for letting us post again /.. We'll try to be more conservative. You guys are real evinrudes, in an ocean of eggbeaters.
How can I submit my license. It's a cross between the GPL and BSD license, although it's not compatible with either. It also suffers from fewer loopholes than the GPL. Here goes:
Any comments? Anyone see any potential loopholes?
ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
IMHO the DSPL is quite nice and whats really needed for the open source movement.
I can remember when shareware programs were very prominent, which was especially during the time when dial-up computer bulletin boards were around.
I'm not sure if there was any "official" standard licence, but nearly every shareware author included a licence stating that you could charge for distribution costs of the program, but not for the program itself. Usually this was placed on a shareware version of the program, and anyone wanting the full version would send money to the author or (on the later days) a publishing company.
The thing is that even with this licence, there were still companies that made money - completely legitimately - through distributing shareware programs. Simtel and various others made CD's full of thousands of shareware programs, an application gold mine at the time, that people could buy in shops for $30. They were really popular for BBS system operators.
There was at least one other company near where I am that was packaging up shareware programs into sleek plastic satchels, and marketing them under their distribution brand in all the computer shops for about $10 each. It was completely legal because they were charging for the the time and effort they'd put into the packaging and distribution.
So in answer to your question about whether that clause in the OTSL prevents programs being available for commercial re-selling, the answer is no it doesn't. It's completely possible for commercial entities to re-sell it. Of course, companies could use it commercially anyway without trying to sell it, and the clause you've highlighted doesn't talk about that at all. I'm not sure how you think any inability to sell the code prevents it from being used commercially. Just because they're not allowed to sell someone's effort doesn't mean they can't use it for their business to make money.
We need a license that protect people from big companies better.
Take a look at the great bridge (that now is dead because of it) and Redhat.
Redhat ripped them off, isn't there any license that can protect you as an author from this kind of abuses?
After all, the only thing open source developers need to know is how to flip burgers. :)
from the opentear.c exploit code header:
/*
Rootshell License
LICENSE: THIS PROGRAM MAY BE FREELY DISTRIBUTED AS LONG AS THE CONTENTS OF
THIS FILE ARE NOT MODIFIED.
This file may not be posted on AntiOnline (http://www.antionline.com) or
AntiCode (http://www.anticode.com). Their staff has a history of removing
all traces of Rootshell copyright notices on code that we write. Please
report any violations of this policy to Rootshell.
*/
heheheh
I (an Anonymous Coward) hereby present the first draft of the Anonymous Coward License (ACL).
The license itself is under the Anonymous Coward License; feel free to create your own versions - if nothing else, it will annoy lawyers, which is always a laudable aim. I might be a lawyer, or then again I might not be - I'm an anonymous coward, remember?
This license, or something based on it, might be useful in the case that you wish to release something anonymously, perhaps because it contravenes the DMCA (or some other obnoxious law that, in lieu of it's revocation, is best widely ignored in the hope that it will go away). Not that I, or any other Anonymous Coward, is suggesting that, of course. Oh no. That would be wrong. And illegal. Illegal and wrong.
... wishing for a world in which nobody had to bother with all this license crap, I remain as ever, anonymously yours,
-- Anonymous Coward.
(If you cut here, you may damage your screen.)
Anonymous Coward License
This material is copyrighted by an anonymous individual or group ("the Author").
Redistribution in source or binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted providing that the following conditions are met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, these conditions, and the disclaimer below.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, these conditions, and the disclaimer below in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
Important Disclaimer: The identity and location of the Author is unknown. Accordingly, no party is or may be held responsible or liable for this material or any resulting effects in any way. Those who use this material do so entirely at their own risk as there is NO WARRANTY of any kind.
(The Anonymous Coward License ends here. We now return you to your regularly scheduled crap.)
It is a Free Software license, because it allows original or modified versions to be released under the GPL. It's also GPL-compatible because of this.
I didn't bother reading the rest, and if I wanted to hack a piece of DSPL, I would probably just use that option -- the rest is too complex and poorly worded (hint: the word etc does not belong in a license. Period.)