>>-----Original Message-----
>>From: License-discuss [mailto:license-discuss-boun...@lists.opensource.org] 
>>On Behalf Of Christopher Sean Morrison via License-discuss
>>Sent: Tuesday, May 28, 2019 11:08 AM
>>To: Christopher Sean Morrison via License-discuss 
>><license-discuss@lists.opensource.org>
>>Cc: Christopher Sean Morrison <brl...@mac.com>
>>Subject: Re: [License-discuss] Evolving the License Review process for OSI


>>>> If government lawyers believe they have a requirement for X and without X 
>>>> they won?t recommend open sourcing then providing them a license that 
>>>> provides X results in more open source code.  This is a good thing as long 
>>>> as X minimally meets the OSD.
>>> 
>>> This is where your logic fails, and thank you for summarizing it so 
>>> well. Also, there is nothing particular about government needs in this 
>>> statement.  Commercial actors use this exact justification for 
>>> advancing their ideas of how open source should expand to meet their 
>>> needs.

>>Thank you for restating the underlying disagreement on the same false 
>>pretense.  Governments are subject to a plethora of different regulations and 
>>laws than commercial actors.  To claim or presume there are no requirements 
>>unique to Government seems quite fallacious.

And both with NOSA 2.0 and the recent LBNL BSD, questions on the list were 
asked about the "regulations and laws" that were dictating certain provisions 
in those licenses, and that an attorney from the agency that drafted these 
licenses respond to those questions:

http://lists.opensource.org/pipermail/license-review_lists.opensource.org/2018-June/003490.html
http://lists.opensource.org/pipermail/license-review_lists.opensource.org/2019-May/004208.html

As far as I can recall, there was no response to these inquiries.  Even just to 
say "this section of the CFR or similar government regulations is why we have 
to write our license this way."

I, for one, find the response "we have to do it this way, we're the government, 
believe us" unsatisfying, as someone who has spent a lot of time both as a 
government employee and parsing  through, committing to memory, and teaching 
people how to understand, at least one fairly dense government procedural 
manual:  https://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/mpep/index.html




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