The decision to use the MIT License is not without its critics
The decision to use the MIT License is not without its critics
Posted Jun 13, 2021 22:42 UTC (Sun) by khim (subscriber, #9252)In reply to: The decision to use the MIT License is not without its critics by Wol
Parent article: Rewriting the GNU Coreutils in Rust
> It makes no statement as to whether the patents are valid
Really? You basically say “software is a math, it couldn't be patented”, ask distributor to agree to that statement (WRT your program only, but what precisely makes it special?) and then expect that anyone who have any patents would just be happy to distribute it?
I don't really understand where such naivety may come from.
> It just says "you agree that this object is not patentable subject matter".Which makes their whole patent portfolio much weaker (if not pointless). Because after they agreed to that they would have to explain what makes your software special and different from all other software. That's not an easy thing to do, especially if you need to convince not patent attorney but layman (which maybe needed in court).
And some think GPLv3 patent grant is too broad.
> And like I said, chances are if I was going down the "patent licence" route, I'd choose the MPL not the GPL, because IN PRACTICE the two would be pretty indistinguishable.True. They both, at least, don't include any funny language which may be interpreted as a declaration to nullify other, unrelated, patents.
