>>-----Original Message----- >>From: License-discuss <license-discuss-boun...@lists.opensource.org> On Behalf Of Eric S. Raymond >>Sent: Monday, February 24, 2020 5:01 AM >>To: license-discuss@lists.opensource.org >>Subject: [License-discuss] "Fairness" vs. mission objectives
>>Pamela Chestek's has asserted that it would be "unfair" to revoke certification of licenses we have previously accepted. Is the proposal to "revoke" or simply to "deprecate"? The latter seems to be a better mechanism to discourage future uses, and nudge current or past users to move to a non-deprecated license, without the immediate harsh consequences against current users. And, FWIW, it seems that a substantial number of the problematic licenses have a very small user base, or indeed, are only used by the original submitter. >>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. There is the other fairness angle here: if an already-approved license has a problematic provision that might be violative of the OSD, is it fair to reject future license submissions containing the same problematic provision? Several recent submitters have invoked a form of stare decisis based on past license approvals, and have argued it is unfair to reject their license for reasons that were not applied to past submissions. That fairness argument, IMO, has some merit. >>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. It would seem to me a first step in that process is to clearly articulate and get community buy-in as to what the overarching principles and missions are here. The OSD could be that, but it seems to me that many have argued there are other principles and missions -- the "unwritten rules" -- that underly the OSI's mission. Having unwritten rules, or rules that favor certain submitters over others, seem to be the main cause of the debates about fairness and the consistency of the process. _______________________________________________ License-discuss mailing list License-discuss@lists.opensource.org http://lists.opensource.org/mailman/listinfo/license-discuss_lists.opensource.org