Since it was requested, allow me to put forward a simple example of a case where choice of venue coupled with choice of law is suboptimal. Star is licensed under a modified CDDL license, which specifies Berlin, Germany as the choice of law and venue.
If the author of Star decides that the Debian maintainer has incorrectly removed a "copyright notice",[1] he could terminate the license under 6.1, and bring action in Berlin for copyright infringement; the maintainer and any other parties to the action (people to whom the work was distributed after notification of breech) would then have to defend themselves in Berlin instead of notifying the court that the venue was improper (or whatever the German equivalent is.) Considering the saber rattling that has come from star's upstream over precisely this issue in cdrecord, it's not so far fetched. On Sun, 03 Jun 2007, Anthony Towns wrote: > On Sat, Jun 02, 2007 at 09:29:08PM -0700, Don Armstrong wrote: > > Choice of venue clauses can short circuit the normal determination of > > jurisdiction in civil cases in some jurisdictions in some cases. > > Contracts and licenses in general short-circuit the normal > determination of rights under common or legislated law in some > jurisdictions in some cases too. Of course; this is a refutation of the thesis that "choice of venue" clauses are legally void, not a claim that they are unique. > > Since this is giving up a right normally enjoyed in exchange for > > the ability to use or modify a work, it appears be a fee, and as > > such fails DFSG 1. > > You're not giving up any rights, you're gaining the right to modify > and distribute the software under certain conditions, just as you > are under the GPL. We don't give up rights under the GPL that we otherwise enjoy though; we only gain ones in specific circumstances. In the case of the CDDL, we lose rights even in the case where we're only using the work. > You're required to give up something you might value and otherwise > demand compensation for, certainly, but there needs to be something > more than that to violate the DFSG. "giving up something that you might value [or] otherwise demand compensation for" applies equally well to cash money as it does to any other intangible which has value. A requirement to send an email to the licensor if you possibly can isn't "cash money" either, but it sure seems to be a fee to me. > The DFSG are a set of *guidelines*, if you can't explain violations > in simple, understandable terms, they're not violations. This is my understanding as well; I'm only explaining the application to DFSG 1 to attempt to appease strict constructionists. > > I'm personally using "feel" as shorthand for "my understanding of > > the legal situtation regarding this clause and its relation to the > > DFSG" > > That's great, but *your understanding* isn't any more important than > anyone else's. I'm not claiming that it is; my point is that my understanding is not *less* important than anyone else's. I've done what everyone should do to come to an understanding. > There's something fundamentally wrong with the way discussions work > on debian-legal that people think that simply posting their > understanding is a valuable contribution. What else can we do? We take input, we examine it, we respond with our understanding of how the input meshes together. I don't believe we're capable of presenting absolute truth. > The reason why it's not is that it doesn't provide any good way of > resolving disagreements: you can either revert to authority (such as > ftpmaster's), you can resort to polls (such as a GR or an informal > one on forums.debian.net), or you can attack people who hold > different opinions in the hopes that they'll stop speaking and thus > not be heard in future. Or we can try to understand the basis for our positions, and either come to a place where we agree, or have completely plumbed the argument so that we agree to disagree. This is my goal. I don't believe we've come to this position on the CDDL yet. If we end up agreeing to disagree, then we should punt, and use the GR process to decide whether the work goes in main or not, and have each side write up a explanation of the problems surrounding the license, and publicise it with those that agree signing on to it. > implying that other people aren't sufficiently "concerned about > licensing matters", aren't "actually engag[ing] the analysis with > counter arguments", don't have a "complete understanding of the > problem" in order to stop them "mak[ing] a determination" sounds > like a pretty good match for the last case. It's very much the opposite, actually. I'd like nothing more than to have people who disagree with my understanding attack the rationale behind my understanding so at the end of the day, no matter how wrong my understanding starts, I end up getting things right. I like to believe that many -legal contributors have this mindset as well. > Ultimately Debian's policy isn't going to be decided by whoever > understands legal issues the best, it's going to be decided by the > developers who contribute to Debian, whether they fully understand > things or not. Trying to limit the discussion to experts is all very > well, but it'll just leave non-experts ignoring the discussions when > they end up making the ultimate decision. So what should we do? I can't force people to become experts, and I very much want to avoid bludgeoning people with licensing issues who aren't interested in hearing about them. > > My goal is to convince ftpmasters and developers that my analysis is > > reasonable, and that these works with licenses containing these kinds > > of clauses have no place in main. Failing that, I can only educate > > users and [...] > > If the project doesn't adopt your views, then promoting them to > users as though they're an official consensus isn't "educat[ing] > users", it's misleading them. That shouldn't stop you from promoting > your opinion *as your opinion*, but honesty demands that you at > least make it clear where official policy ends and your opinion > begins. I don't believe I've ever intentionally advocated my understanding or opinion as an official consensus, and I don't plan on starting now. In fact, when I talk publicly about such things, I'm very careful to indicate that my opinion is nothing more than my own. Insinuating that I would intentionally mislead users is rather insulting, frankly. Getting back to my point: users should be aware that CDDL licenses with this clause may be result in giving away rights that they may otherwise not want to give away, not that Debian's offical opinion is that CDDL licenses are bad. This is the area that education is useful, just as explanations to users why GFDL works even without invariant sections still have problems that they may want to be aware of, even though Debian's official opionion is that they aren't serious enough to exclude them from main. > while discussion on debian-legal of views [...] is more or less > unwelcome -- or at the very least seen as unwelcome by people who > hold those views -- I don't see any way of improving things. What would make it more welcoming? A large part of the problem is the need to continuously point out counter arguments, but using wikis or statements is an easy way of codifying the counter argument and allowing for refutation on both sides. > In particular, whoever ends up responsible for Debian's official > policy will need to spend their time educating users on what the > official policy actually *is*, not their opinion on what the > official policy should have been. We have very few "offical policies" though; there are some things that are widely agreed to be free, some things that are widely agreed to be non-free, and some things which are much more contentious. Someone who is capable of talking about the official policy is going to necessarily have their own opinions and will express it. > To take a particular example: if you want to retain the privelege to > call the GFDL vote result "wrong", you're excluding yourself from > being in a position to define Debian's interpretation of "free > software". Not at all; it's quite possible to publicly state that a ruling was incorrect and still adjudicate under the ruling. Judges who have cases remanded to them have to do this all the time. I personally have had to explain the difference between my own personal opinion on the GFDL with Debian's official position as described by the GR. > Personally, I think comparing the reactions to getting overruled by > GR of ftpmaster members to various subscribers of -legal is probably > instructive. Like whom? While many may have expressed dissatisfaction with the outcome,[2] to my knowledge no one on -legal has expressed as the "offical policy" on the GFDL contrary to the GR outcome without being corrected. Don Armstrong 1: We'll assume that this is a notice that serves a functional role. 2: Considering that I've spent a great deal of time trying to get the other "non-invariant" issues fixed, my own opinion should be obvious. -- "A one-question geek test. If you get the joke, you're a geek: Seen on a California license plate on a VW Beetle: 'FEATURE'..." -- Joshua D. 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