Bruce Perens asked:

> Are the W3C meetings you mentioned the ones I attended? I lost support after 
> I left HP.

 

I don't remember. I have a difficult enough time remembering my own history 
with this topic. I've repressed some of it, especially after I left Apache and 
thus left W3C. "Open standards" doesn't always mean open to the open source 
public, and W3C is a closed membership organization, much like OSI has 
apparently become. You and I can't always play there.

 

Lots of people in the open source community say: "We prefer no software patents 
at all." I don't agree because I know that the US Constitution is difficult to 
change. In any event, a royalty-free patent gives us what we need without 
changing the law, even if the patent owner retains defensive rights and the W3C 
equivalent of "patent copyleft" for the software. 

 

Please comment directly on the 10-item W3C Royalty-Free License 
<https://www.w3.org/Consortium/Patent-Policy-20170801/#sec-Requirements>  
requirements. Can you incorporate them somehow into the OSD? Perhaps even use 
it as a professionally written model for a revised OSD that deals with both 
copyrights and patents?

 

/Larry

 

From: Bruce Perens <br...@perens.com> 
Sent: Sunday, November 11, 2018 7:02 PM
To: Lawrence Rosen <lro...@rosenlaw.com>; license-discuss@lists.opensource.org
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] Open source software licenses and the OSD

 

Larry, Dave Rudin is in the group of supporters I meet with, and we've 
discussed this. Are the W3C meetings you mentioned the ones I  attended? I lost 
support after I left HP.

 

Thanks

 

Bruce

 

On Sat, Nov 10, 2018 at 1:02 PM Lawrence Rosen <lro...@rosenlaw.com 
<mailto:lro...@rosenlaw.com> > wrote:

Bruce, 

 

I support your efforts for open standards and royalty-free patents. However, a 
couple of warnings for OSI over-reach in these areas. You are not alone. Please 
incorporate our own previous efforts, with the support of attorneys from many 
software companies and foundations, toward those goals. This can be a community 
effort.

 

1. The very term "open standards" causes diarrhea in some quarters. One of 
Linux Foundations' attorneys, for example, once irately walked out of my talk 
on that subject because his law firm supports RAND "for some standards." The 
standards organization OASIS had to allow all of "royalty-free," "RAND" and 
"FRAND" for their standards, although most of their standards are now 
royalty-free anyway. And IETF refuses to define the term at all, although they 
require patent notices from contributors, for whatever that may be worth.  I 
know from personal experience that standards participants are often afraid of 
free donations of their patents. This is a world-wide issue. I look forward to 
your report about your own interactions with those folks. 

 

2. The term "royalty-free patents" was the subject of several years' debate at 
W3C. I was then an invited expert from OSI to advocate for the open source 
community. We won a great patent license model for open standards. It has since 
been widely accepted by the software industry. Its 10-item definition of 
royalty-free patent licenses was written by our W3C committee with excellent 
advice from some of the attorneys on this license-discuss@ list from those 
companies. We are all proud! I recommend that model for incorporation – in some 
way, perhaps by reference – with the OSD.

 

3. I then worked for several years with David Rudin from Microsoft and 
representatives from others in the software and open source communities in the 
Open Web Foundation (OWF). Our "open specification" licenses, which 
incorporated the best from the OSD and the W3C definitions, are posted on that 
website. Please feel free to add us as supporters for your own OSI efforts.

 

I'll take the flak from that irate attorney a few years ago by using this 
phrase: "We want open standards, with royalty-free patents, for open source 
software."

 

/Larry

 

P.S. You said you didn't want to participate in this discussion "when it 
features conflation of the license under consideration with other licenses." 
That is the entire purpose of "license-discuss@" rather than "license-review@". 
I am obeying Simon Phipps and others when I moved this discussion here. Indeed, 
it is a great place to discuss open standards, royalty-free patents, and lots 
of open source software issues, before OSI acts on its own.

 

 

 

From: License-discuss <license-discuss-boun...@lists.opensource.org 
<mailto:license-discuss-boun...@lists.opensource.org> > On Behalf Of Bruce 
Perens
Sent: Saturday, November 10, 2018 12:56 AM
To: license-discuss@lists.opensource.org 
<mailto:license-discuss@lists.opensource.org> 
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] Open source software licenses and the OSD

 

Nicholas,

 

No problem. OSI is fighting in the standards arena and the EU with very 
well-funded entities that insist that Open Source is only about copyright and 
wish to assert their royalties on standard-essential patents when there is an 
Open Source implementation. The way they have gone about it would astound you, 
but we'll save that for another forum. Freedom is not just about copyright, and 
any time someone seems to imply that OSI or the OSD is just about copyright, 
I'll push back, even if that implication wasn't really their intent.

 

I am not otherwise participating in a lot of this discussion when it features 
conflation of the license under consideration with other licenses authored by 
the discussion participants. I understand the authors are upset about those 
licenses, this just isn't the place.

 

I thought Bradley had good points, though. 

 

    Thanks

 

    Bruce

 

On Fri, Nov 9, 2018 at 4:15 PM Nicholas Matthew Neft Weinstock 
<nwein...@qti.qualcomm.com> wrote:

Hi Bruce,

 

I’m sorry, I think there’s a disconnect.

 

I read Larry’s statement to be about the definition of Open Source Software, 
but you’re referring to standards and patents in standards.  I didn’t intend to 
get into a discussion of standards.

 

I don’t have a problem with Open Source Licenses that have a royalty-free 
Patent license as one of the license grants, and therefore requires a 
royalty-free Patent license from Contributors.  This makes complete sense.  I’m 
simply saying that it’s impractical to expect a project maintainer to 
conclusively state that nobody has royalty-bearing claims.  For Patents and 
Trademarks, at most, they can only make that claim about Contributors’ claims. 

 

It wouldn’t be fair for Disney to contribute a picture of Mickey Mouse to a 
project and then sue for Trademark violation.  But if a random Contributor adds 
a picture of Mickey Mouse to a project, Disney can still enforce their 
Trademark.

 

An interesting example of this (for Patents) is the Opus codec.  If you look at 
the bottom of their license page (http://opus-codec.org/license/), they 
indicate that they actually made the effort to have outside counsel evaluate 
potential 3rd party patents, and provide the results.  How many Open Source 
projects would be willing to do this, let alone have the financial backing to 
afford it?  Or conduct a worldwide search of registered Trademarks?  And even 
in the case of Opus, they only cite analysis of patents disclosed by four 
companies to the associated standards organization (IETF).  What if there are 
other companies with (possibly) relevant patents that didn’t make disclosures 
to the IETF?  What if someone contributed a picture of the cartoon penguin to 
use as the codec’s mascot?

 

On the other hand, an open source project can make the claim that there are no 
royalty-bearing Copyright claims, because the only Copyright claims covering 
the project are from Contributors.

 

Thanks,

Nick

 

Bruce Perens wrote:

I am the standards chair of OSI. We are indeed concerned with patents in 
standards, and we spend a lot of time and money on the issue. We assert that 
the OSD terms apply to patents as well as copyright.

 

    Thanks

 

    Bruce

 

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