Hi!

 

If anyone can find cases were Amazon or an Amazon company is publishing open 
source under a non-standard BSD license, please let me know, and we will fix it.

 

If anyone gets involved in formally step by step relicensing an open source 
project and there are commits to it from Amazon staff, again, please let me 
know, and we may can help you.

 

Amazon’s preferred permissive license is Apache 2.0.  In part because it 
doesn’t have this “dozens and dozens of pointless minor variants” problem.

 

..m

 

 

Mark Atwood < <mailto:atwo...@amazon.com> atwo...@amazon.com>

Principal, Open Source

+1-206-604-2198

 

 

 

From: License-discuss <license-discuss-boun...@lists.opensource.org> On Behalf 
Of Russell Nelson
Sent: Monday, August 17, 2020 8:13 PM
To: license-discuss@lists.opensource.org
Subject: [EXTERNAL] [License-discuss] A modest proposal to reduce the number of 
BSD licenses

 


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links or open attachments unless you can confirm the sender and know the 
content is safe.

 

We've all seen the vast variety of BSD licenses. You know the ones I mean: "Do 
what you want with the code, but if you change it, you can't mis-represent it 
as the same thing. We don't include any warranty because you didn't pay us for 
one."

I propose that we find two things:

1.      A pair of BSD-like licenses which are so near to each other as to be 
practically the same in effect, and 
2.      A party that is using one of these licenses and is willing to relicense 
under the other. 

The problem has always been that open source project accumulate licensors and 
patches in equal number, and in theory to relicense something requires assent 
from all licensors. I'm saying that we don't have to worry about them because 
they are suffering no harm because of #1.

This has been proposed before. What is different now is that the Public 
Software Fund is going to stand behind this process, and defend the project's 
editor against lawsuits by any licensors who object to this relicense.

Doesn't matter which license is primary to the other because this is just a 
test case. I believe that once people see that a relicense of no significant 
effect is easy, and lets the OSI make open source licensing less complicated -- 
which is the organization's long-term goal.

Suggestions for #1 and #2?

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