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This is the opportunity to write a wish list

This is the opportunity to write a wish list

Posted Jan 9, 2026 23:07 UTC (Fri) by Cyberax (✭ supporter ✭, #52523)
In reply to: This is the opportunity to write a wish list by kleptog
Parent article: European Commission issues call for evidence on open source

> As a company we use hundreds, maybe thousands of open source packages, we can't go negotiating individual contracts for each one...

Radio stations solved that via mechanical rights. Each time a radio station plays a song, they pay a small fee to an organization that represents the collective rights of musicians. It then redistributes the fees as royalties.

It's going to be more complicated for OpenSource, but perhaps something like this is the future.


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This is the opportunity to write a wish list

Posted Jan 10, 2026 0:59 UTC (Sat) by euclidian (subscriber, #145308) [Link] (1 responses)

I do see it as a possibility of a number of open source projects pooling together so you can buy a single CRA license and it covers all the projects in the pool and all the dependencies.

For example GNU could run a pool containing all the applications / libraries under it's general banner.

This might encourage a slightly tighter control of dependencies as well. As you would have an advantage to all your dependencies being in the same pool as you.

This is the opportunity to write a wish list

Posted Jan 10, 2026 13:28 UTC (Sat) by paulj (subscriber, #341) [Link]

> This might encourage a slightly tighter control of dependencies as well.

Not sure about the social logistics of projects pooling together. However, regardless, it sounds like the CRA makes tighter control of dependencies valuable. (Which would generally be good).

This is the opportunity to write a wish list

Posted Jan 10, 2026 14:27 UTC (Sat) by kleptog (subscriber, #1183) [Link]

> Radio stations solved that via mechanical rights. Each time a radio station plays a song, they pay a small fee to an organization that represents the collective rights of musicians. It then redistributes the fees as royalties.

Except in the US notably. But yes, that is one solution, generally with some statutory basis (mainly, radio stations don't need to ask permission). It would be awesome if something similar existed for movies/series so you wouldn't need to figure out which streaming service has which movie. But I digress.

> It's going to be more complicated for OpenSource, but perhaps something like this is the future.

I don't see that happening for software though. There are simply way more businesses using many more pieces of software than the number of radio stations. And music has a clearer definition of "released" and "ownership".

But who knows, we're just at the beginning of the process, who know where this will go.

This is the opportunity to write a wish list

Posted Jan 10, 2026 15:53 UTC (Sat) by Wol (subscriber, #4433) [Link]

> Radio stations solved that via mechanical rights. Each time a radio station plays a song, they pay a small fee to an organization that represents the collective rights of musicians. It then redistributes the fees as royalties.

But! And I don't know whether it describes the way things work in America, or over here, or both, but there have been plenty of studies that show mis-reporting by people playing music is rife. "We played this music by that artist on the other channel" - except that what is reported never happened when you check up (and the agencies never check, it's far too much work). It's not deliberate, people don't make notes at the time, and memory is fallible (don't I know it!!!)

This almost always favours the big artists. Then of course, there's the collection agencies fees and expenses - which are mostly flat rate. So little artists never get a penny because their royalties don't add up big enough. On top of being gouged by mis-reporting.

So this mechanism is probably going to seriously fail that lone developer in Nebraska, which probably covers 90% of the guys doing the work and needing support, and is much more likely to benefit the big guys who - frankly - probably don't need it.

It's going to have to be something like the little guys band together and form a collective, so they can appoint a collections agent with the authority (and ability) to say "I have a team of ten programmers (each with their own project) who have banded together to jointly offer a software CE mark on their projects". The agent can then distribute the money according to how much work everybody is doing (including themself :-), and everybody is on the hook to pile in and help should a CRA vulnerability arise.

Cheers,
Wol


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