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 14, 2021 8:07 UTC (Mon) by Wol (subscriber, #4433)In reply to: The decision to use the MIT License is not without its critics by khim
Parent article: Rewriting the GNU Coreutils in Rust
> 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?
It's a special case :-) But basically, I just see it as stating the LEGAL reality that software IS unpatentable. Yes I know there are plenty of people tring to do an end-run round SCOTUS and the EPO treaty, but this would be my little contribution to the battle.
> I don't really understand where such naivety may come from.
Lawyers love arguing things. Judges rule as minimally as they can. Dragging this into a case about different software is quite likely to be thrown out as irrelevant, and if it's a case over this software, well, I doubt anyone would get themselves into a court case over it.
Maybe I just haven't been around big corporate lawyers enough ... :-)
> > 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.
And, in my case, as copyright licences, as I said they're pretty indistinguishable.
Cheers,
Wol
