Licensing is the easy part - A fuzzy reply.
Posted Jul 30, 2007 21:17 UTC (Mon) by
khim (subscriber, #9252)
In reply to:
Licensing is the easy part - A fuzzy reply. by Cardinal_Bill
Parent article:
Microsoft trying to get code open-source certification (LinuxWorld)
The this will be huge PR blunder no matter what OSI will do. There are few licenses which qualify as free software licenses and OSI will have no sane way to rebuff them but most of them don't qualify as free software and will be rejected. But if even one license will be approved Microsoft will be able to use it for advertisement like "our shared source licensing got OSI approval! we are friends of Open Software now!"...
Remember Creative Commons and RMS story ? There are bunch of CC licenses: free ones, semi-free ones, non-free ones. And while there are a lot of CC licensed works most of them are not free. FSF admitted that some of CC licenses are free but added disclaimer "Creative Commons publishes many licenses which are very different. Therefore, to say that a work “uses a Creative Commons license” is to leave the principal questions about the work's licensing unanswered. When you see such a statement in a work, please ask the author to highlight the substance of the license choices. And if someone proposes to “use a Creative Commons license” for a certain work, it is vital to ask immediately, “Which one?”". May be it will be good idea to actually count amount of code contributed on OSI-approved terms and non-OSI-approved terms to have at least some rebuttal for future massive Microsoft's campaign ?
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