> On Dec 5, 2018, at 8:43 AM, Jim Jagielski <j...@jagunet.com> wrote:
> 
> I am not exactly sure how the wants, needs, and desires of GOSS are different 
> from the entire FOSS community in general... or why it should be accorded 
> "special" treatment or consideration.

This is one of several points of disagreement with government lawyers.  Even if 
the wants, needs, and desires coincide with FOSS community in general, there 
are distinct legal situations that are not currently typical outside GOSS due 
to Title 17 and regulations like ITAR.

Regarding this current attribution thread, consider even a simple obligation to 
display — I can imagine a number of ways that could run afoul of 31 U.S. Code § 
333 (for example) if the contributor or author were simply a Dept. of Treasury 
government employee.  Certainly, this is not entirely dissimilar from a company 
simply avoiding a particular license (e.g., AGPL) but the specific case isn’t 
the point.  It’s that there’s a rather large complex body of laws, regulations, 
and treaties, particularly at the state-actor level, that don’t affect general 
public and (due to Title 17) affect nearly every license option.

Many questions are simply legally untested.  What happens to code lacking 
copyright protection in only some jurisdictions, yet distributed with a license 
fundamentally structured on copyright?  Will bad things happen if the federal 
government slaps a copyright statement on their code with an explanation?  Does 
Berne saying a work typically has reciprocal right protection imply Gov’t codes 
have full or no protection in a given country?  What happens if a Gov’t office 
use a license not based on copyright, yet attempts to assert rights Title 17 
says are not protected in the US (but *only* in the US)?…

It may very well be the case that there’s nothing legally unique, but there are 
currently many indications to the contrary.  That’s why there’s still *very* 
limited participation by government agencies in open source despite them being 
major creators of source code.  Nobody wants to be the guinea pig.

Cheers!
Sean


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