McCoy, if you're willing to talk with Diane, I'd appreciate it!  I did talk 
with her quite a while ago about the USG's issues, but nothing much came of the 
interaction (she seemed very, very busy at the time).  If you're able to 
continue the discussions, I would be very interested in seeing where they went. 
 Note that I'm no longer the lead person at ARL regarding OSS, so I can only be 
interested in my personal capacity (although if things seem to be heading in 
the right direction, I can ping all the right people from my end).

That said, I'm only willing to push on my end **if** the OSI is willing to 
seriously consider the USG's predicament, and willing to accept that a new 
license may be necessary.  Ideally this would be a better version of NOSA, one 
that everyone can accept, but I personally don't care what license is used as 
long as it solves all the major issues.  Otherwise we're back at the same 
impasse that we've been at for some time.

Thanks,
Cem Karan

________________________________
From: McCoy Smith [mc...@lexpan.law]
Sent: Monday, March 30, 2020 5:08 PM
To: license-discuss@lists.opensource.org
Cc: 'Nigel T'; Karan, Cem F CIV USARMY CCDC ARL (USA)
Subject: [Non-DoD Source] A new USG License

All active links contained in this email were disabled. Please verify the 
identity of the sender, and confirm the authenticity of all links contained 
within the message prior to copying and pasting the address to a Web browser.

________________________________



From: Richard Fontana <rfont...@redhat.com>
Sent: Saturday, February 29, 2020 11:42 AM
To: mc...@lexpan.law; license-discuss@lists.opensource.org
Cc: Nigel T <nigel.2...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] [Non-DoD Source] Re: Resources to discourage 
governments from bespoke licenses?



NOSA 2.0 was not rejected as such -- the definitive statement by the OSI board 
was in November 2017:



"Resolved, That, in view of the length, complexity, and ambiguities in the 
submitted drafts of the NASA Open Source Agreement version 2.0, it is the 
opinion of the OSI that the conformance of NOSA 2.0 to the OSD cannot be 
assured. OSI thus can neither approve nor reject the license, and NASA is 
invited to submit a new draft of NOSA for consideration by the OSI."

Caution-http://lists.opensource.org/pipermail/license-review_lists.opensource.org/2017-November/003309.html
 < 
Caution-http://lists.opensource.org/pipermail/license-review_lists.opensource.org/2017-November/003309.html
 >



Nigel, I am sorry you are still so angry about how NOSA 2.0 was dealt with. In 
retrospect I would have tried to convince the OSI board to reject the license 
outright early on. I would say that, until a year or so ago, the OSI board was 
reluctant to formally reject any submitted licenses, not as a matter of formal 
policy or anything, but rather as a kind of institutional custom, although 
earlier in OSI's history there were apparently a few outright rejections.



It's also worth remembering that the OSI streamlined its license review process 
last year in large part because of the experience with the NOSA 2.0 submission.



Now that the Board election is over, thought I’d give my two cents on this 
[when I was a candidate for the Board, I didn’t think discussing this was a 
good idea; now that I’m not, I’m back to just a regular-old frequent list 
commentator, so not in any way associated with decisions of the Board].



I’d like to see NOSA 2.0 (or 3.0 if that indeed exists) resubmitted for 
approval on license-approval.   The history on it is just too murky to me and 
I’m of the opinion that license approvals or disapprovals (or withdrawals in 
the face of disapproval) ought to be clearer.  The new process improvements I 
think are a step in the right direction, and I think it would be beneficial to 
have NOSA x.0 go through that process.



To me, that license is a good candidate for reconsideration because:

  1.  It is designed to be an improved version of an existing OSI approved 
license (Caution-https://opensource.org/licenses/NASA-1.3 < 
Caution-https://opensource.org/licenses/NASA-1.3 > ).  OSI should always be 
biased toward giving additional consideration of improved versions of 
already-approved licenses, as it’s a good way to fix problems with the old 
version, particularly when an old version may have gotten approved with some 
OSD conformance issues that can be fixed in the new version.
  2.  If there is a version 3.0 that may have addressed issues that were raised 
with 2.0, that ought to be considered afresh, without any of the concerns 
raised with 2.0 impacting approval (unless the problems that were identified 
with 2.0 continue into 3.0).
  3.  OSI should be particularly receptive to the USG’s desire to adopt or 
produce more open source code (AFAIK, USG is the biggest single consumer of 
software in the world), and taking the extra step to help facilitate their 
adoption or use should be encouraged.



Also, at one point in the thread on USG licensing, someone (I think it was Cem) 
indicated that something like CC0 (with a public domain dedication for 
copyright, with a highly permissive license backstop for jurisdictions where 
public domain dedications were not recognized or legally problematic), but that 
because CC0 is not an OSI license (because of the disclaimer of patent rights), 
it didn’t solve one of the issues they were trying to address with NOSA 2.0.  I 
wonder if another solution would be to see if Creative Commons would be  
willing to either create a CC0 with an express patent grant commensurate in 
scope with the public domain dedication/license backstop, or would allow the 
separate creation of one based on CC0.  If that seems like a fruitful idea, I 
could approach Diane Peters (who I know and used to meet up with periodically 
before our state went into social lockdown) about whether that was an idea they 
would support.



Not sure if USG is up for that (and if so, if any USG lawyer is willing to step 
into the process to discuss specific legal issues with any submitted license), 
but thought I’d throw that out there and see if there was any traction on the 
USG side for that.
_______________________________________________
The opinions expressed in this email are those of the sender and not 
necessarily those of the Open Source Initiative. Official statements by the 
Open Source Initiative will be sent from an opensource.org email address.

License-discuss mailing list
License-discuss@lists.opensource.org
http://lists.opensource.org/mailman/listinfo/license-discuss_lists.opensource.org
  • [License-discus... McCoy Smith
    • Re: [Licen... Karan, Cem F CIV USARMY CCDC ARL (USA) via License-discuss

Reply via email to