Bruce Perens wrote:

> I do think it is the case that the discussion became repetitious.

 

As one commenter who has been repetitious for nearly 20 years here, I apologize 
for saying things that I still believe but that OSI and you, Bruce, seem often 
to ignore. I repeat myself below in random order:

 

1. The most important role for OSI should be education about license 
differences, not merely listing licenses in random or alphabetical order. 
That's just a shopping list, not a dinner menu. There are several attorneys on 
this list who have taught open source in law schools. Use their skills to do 
that here.

 

2. OSI should stop ranking licenses based upon popularity. The GPL is popular. 
So what? The BSD-2 is popular. So what? Neither license was written by God.

 

3. OSI should stop identifying licenses as "niche" or other disparaging 
comments. What do individual or OSI board's opinions on that count for? In 
science and most other fields, niches sometimes become mainstream. That is why 
I am relearning physics many years after I went to college and had been taught 
that there was only one galaxy (or a very few!) and no black holes. That is why 
I keep on this OSI list, in the occasional hope that someone will invent 
something new rather than just another BSD.

 

4. OSI should agitate for the proposition that all open source licenses are 
compatible for use and for source code access, for copying the software, for 
creating derivative works under those specific licenses, and for distributing 
that software to the world. Many of the other opinions here about license 
compatibility, especially for the GPL licenses, are unfortunate efforts to 
stifle code sharing for aggregate works based on the false notion that almost 
every aggregation is a derivative work. Almost no aggregation is a derivative 
work of software.

 

5. While the OSI board doesn't need just attorneys, non-attorney's opinions 
about licenses should be accompanied by "IANAL". I spent many years going to 
law school and learning licensing, and regret that some people here think 
lawyer's opinions (not just mine!) are not helpful. The OSI board doesn't 
practice medicine either, for good reason.

 

6. OSI should stop approving licenses that are legally duplicates and 
irrelevant. The current list of permissive licenses on Blue Oak Council is 
overwhelming and thus useless to naive open source contributors. And of course, 
it is entirely useless to lawyers who actually read and understand those simple 
licenses already.

 

7. The OSD is over 20 years old. Before the US Constitution was 20 years old, 
we already had 10 amendments! Times and philosophies and business models and 
technology evolve. So can the OSD if we're allowed to debate that without 
claiming historical validity to everything good that we did in the past.

 

8. You simply can't ignore patents. You can't assume that RAND and FRAND can be 
squeezed into open source. That is a major reason to think again about the OSD.

 

My opinions, for whatever use you make of them.

 

/Larry 

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