> > It is not necessary to state up front that you are not willful and > malicious, or careless or negligent. Society expects that from you anyway.
I think practical jokes should be allowed under the GPL, BSD, and similar licenses. If you really have legal concerns you should talk to a lawyer. Asking for > anonymous opinion on a forum isn't legal advice. This should certainly not > be the place to discuss legal matters such as the scope of a license. I > don't think anybody who answered you is actually a lawyer. If you come upon > something which you can't understand its license then don't use it. I agree. I’m not a lawyer. I can’t recommend any open source license for life critical applications, which is an opinion I’ll bring to any future employer. On my own I’ve just been making art with Go and hope that the MIT license protects me from misuse liability in the general purpose libraries I’ve pulled from the art projects and put on GitHub. I did get a fancy meal from them as we discussed the dangers of becoming > obligated because of not reading the fine print. I hope “oppressive” tends to mean “reasonable compromise”. Matt On Tuesday, May 15, 2018 at 9:18:05 PM UTC-5, David Skinner wrote: > > Regarding this statement. > >> THE AUTHORS OF THIS SOFTWARE DID NOT INTENTIONALLY MAKE MISTAKES OR >> INCLUDE PRACTICAL JOKES > > > If you place software out in the wild, and you have a LICENSE with no > warranty and indemnification and terms of service and imprint > > - You are not protected from frivolous law suits. > - You are not protected if your actions were willful and malicious, or > careless or negligent. > - You are not protected if you try to represent yourself pro se > - You are not protected if you are too broke to fight it in court. > > If you do go to court and your attorney is computer savvy, he may > demonstrate to the judge that there was a legal binding agreement that the > damaged party had to have been aware of when visiting the web site or > repository where the software was obtained. Most judges will seize upon > such proof to dismiss a case or rule in your favor. Especially if your > attorney testifies (inappropriate) that the agreement was one he drafted, > or reviewed for fitness. > > It is not necessary to state up front that you are not willful and > malicious, or careless or negligent. Society expects that from you anyway. > > This is not to be considered legal advice, it is just a personal > observation. > > For specific legal advice you should consult with your families attorney > in your jurisdiction. > > I once wrote a small program for a company on spec, it was too small for a > formal contract. What I did for my own protection was to prepare a shrink > wrap license that required them to scroll down and click OK before > installing. When I went back a couple of weeks later to see if they like > the utility program, they were very happy, until a gave them a hard copy of > the license agreement. I had included a clause that if they used the > program for more than one week they were obligated to provide me additional > compensation in the form of lunch at my favorite restaurant. They thought > it was a funny joke. I did get a fancy meal from them as we discussed the > dangers of becoming obligated because of not reading the fine print. > > You should be aware that if you do something as simple as putting your > resume on the Internet and getting a programming assignment from Germany, > you could be in for a stiff fine if you have not complied with their local > regulations regarding imprint. If you have any contact with the EU and you > fail to comply with their privacy laws then as a US citizen you may be > considered in violation of treaty, big fine. The US is not the only place > where the legal system can get oppressive. > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.