Special Treatment
Posted Oct 16, 2007 23:56 UTC (Tue) by
rickmoen (subscriber, #6943)
In reply to:
Special Treatment by ncm
Parent article:
OSI Approves Microsoft License Submissions
That's a bit sweeping, vague, and woefully short on logic. It also changes the subject.
1. You started out with a rather lazy slur about "special treatment", which you didn't bother to substantiate, and seem to have dropped along the way, except in your subject header. Your idea of substantiation was to make a (false) claim about OSI having allegedly announced, at some (unstated) time past, that it would categorically approve no more licences without "compelling reason" -- which as I pointed out at some length was a highly inaccurate recounting of the actual pending (not approved) committee work.
2. From that inaccurate starting assumption, you then somehow arrived at the non-sequitur conclusion that OSI had been "gamed", without bothering to say what that game is, except for dark mutterings about a "process". Whatever the Redmondians' "process" is, would OSI sabotaging the integrity of its own certification process by refusing to certify an obviously qualifying, submitted licence change the outcome of such a "process"?
3. Also, you speak as if Microsoft Corporation were the only feasible users, and their codebases the only feasible application, of Ms-RL and MS-PL. Were Netscape Communications the only conceivable users, and Mozilla Communicator the only conceivable use, of MPL, when it was written? In my experience, open source licences are equally useable by all who find them to fill a need, often people and uses not anticipated by their authors.
Anyway, I think I can reasonably speculate about Microsoft Corporation's intended use of those two licences: They'll experiment with the licences' use for maintenance of non-GPL commonses, and as a trial balloon for open source within that firm generally. Yawn. People not liking those terms will retain exactly the same remedy that always applies: Don't adopt those terms for one's own work, if you don't like them; don't write new code under them. Their commonses, in conjunction with participation by others, will either thrive or not. Those who don't partake will be no better or worse off.
Rick Moen
rick@linuxmafia.com
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