Pamela Chestek's has aasserted that it would be "unfair" to revoke certification of licenses we have previously accepted.
There is a kind of "fairness" I think we do owe - that is, process fairness. Transparency, accountabilty, and judging licenses without fear or favor. But I deny that "fairness" in the sense Ms. Chestek seems to intend it falls under tht rubric, and affirm that we *should* revoke licenses on any occasion that we discover that we have erred in analyzing them and they have negative consequences for our mission. Ms. Chestek seems to think we would be "unfair" if we certify a license, others place reliance on it, and we then revoke certification. But let's consider an analogy. Suppose we were...say...Underwriter's Laboratories. We certify the safety of a piece of electrical equipment; we then discover there was an error in testing it and it can be injurious. At that point it would become our *duty* to revoke certification to minimize future harm, and we would be wrong to be dissuaded from that course merely because the vendor and users of that equipment might be inconvenienced or suffer monetary loss. The analogy is exact. We should prioritize OSI's principles and mission over the incidental costs of de-certifying a license, because the defense of those principle and the execution of that mission is what our community expects and our charter demands. (I am not at present advocating revoking the certitification of any specific license. I am making a meta-level point, about principles.) -- <a href="http://www.catb.org/~esr/">Eric S. Raymond</a> The United States is in no way founded upon the Christian religion -- George Washington & John Adams, in a diplomatic message to Malta. _______________________________________________ License-discuss mailing list License-discuss@lists.opensource.org http://lists.opensource.org/mailman/listinfo/license-discuss_lists.opensource.org