> On Jun 8, 2019, at 9:21 AM, Thorsten Glaser <t...@mirbsd.de> wrote:
> 
> Desert island, chinese dissident… or even simple things
> such as, a code hosting platform in Russian or Japanese
> which is not discoverable for _you_.

I think we’re talking past each other.  I can trivially pull up foreign content 
on search with the right engines and terms, if they’re actually available on 
the Internet at all.  Exclusive non-Internet availability would be an 
interesting consideration, but arguably unnecessary w.r.t. being considered 
conventionally available, and unlikely with any on the current list.

I don’t see value in the hypothetical.  I look at the current list of licenses, 
I do not see one that would likely be only found under limited access.  One 
might think the special purpose licenses good candidates, but I was able to 
find several of them trivially.

The question (as I originally understood it) is whether there are any OSI 
licenses where use cannot be found, which to me is not academic.  We don’t need 
to find all instances.  We don’t need to determine whether a use is notable or 
even active at this point.  Just whether use exists.

> On Jun 10, 2019, at 1:44 AM, Rick Moen <r...@linuxmafia.com> wrote:
> 
> Quoting Christopher Sean Morrison via License-discuss 
> (license-discuss@lists.opensource.org):
> 
>> Code under an Open Source license that is not publicly available might
>> as well not be.  
> 
> Objection:  Thorsten didn't speak of code that lacks public
> availability.

I didn’t say he did.  He commented on a potential lack of public hosting as 
grounds for “absolutely not even [coming] close to checking whether a license 
is in use”.  I commented on the general notion of public availability and 
discoverability as being sufficient.  They are related, but I am not putting 
words in his mouth.  Ditto to the second objection.

To me, it would be an absurd argument to suggest not even trying to determine 
if a license is in use (anywhere) because it might only be used in some obscure 
really hard to find place on the dark web or in an isolated pocket of the 
Internet in China.  I look at the list of OSI licenses, and frankly would be 
surprised if any of them do not have a trivially discoverable use.

What I would expect is all but a handful are really trivial, and then a more 
productive conversation (and more rigorous discovery) could be made with those 
few.

Sean


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