On 5/1/20 7:26 AM, Anton Shepelev wrote:
Hello, all

May I ask a question in this mailing list about the interpretation
of a license for a commercial product? Although it would be
patently off-topic, I don't know of another place where one may
seek help of people converstant in legalese.

Any open source license may be used with any commercial product. We're fine with commerce. Go, make money off your open source software. Just remember that the software is open source, and anyone who receives your software must be free to sell it just as you have sold it.

If you've created the software, you have an edge on anyone who tries to resell it, because you are the source of the software, and the copyright notice will recognize that, and these other resellers will have to advertise you as they resell it.

No, they can't just strip off the copyright and add their own. That is intentional copyright infringement, and you can sue for treble damages (as long as your software's copyright is registered). Most open source software isn't associated with commerce, but if yours is, the treble damages can be significant enough to get a lawyer's attention. She will then be willing to sue for a portion of the damages, costing you nothing.

If you were thinking of licensing your software with a license which isn't open source, well, then we wish you good luck and godspeed. You should employ a lawyer to write a license that meets your needs.


_______________________________________________
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

Reply via email to