On 4/5/21 10:54 AM, Richard Fontana wrote:
So, to be clear, what happened is that the heading "Zero-Clause BSD"
apparently got changed to "Zero-Clause BSD / Free Public License
1.0.0". It's not clear when this happened. I left the OSI board at the
end of March 2019 (and also ceased having access to edit the OSI
website). I don't*think*  I would have made this change without
remembering it, nor can I think of why I would have wanted to make
such a change. I had come to be firmly in support of having
"Zero-Clause BSD" be the single name for the license in question.

I made the change.

Unfortunately, during Richard Stallman's much-publicized return to the Free
Software Foundation, OSI has essentially renamed 0BSD back to "Free Public
License 1.0.0" on its website.
It was made on August 15, 2019.

I made the change, unaware of most of this history, simply because the license pages had two names for the same license, with two hyperlinks going to the same page. You can see the version on the Wayback Machine here: https://web.archive.org/web/20190727013543/https://opensource.org/licenses/alphabetical It didn't make any sense to me to have the same license listed with two different names as if they were entirely different licenses, so I combined them.

The pages have all been updated to remove "Free Public License 1.0.0" from the title of the Zero-Clause BSD but, given the fact that the license has also been in use as the Free Public License 1.0.0 since as early as 2015, I have reinstated the listings under that title on the alphabetical and category listing pages too. The statement on the license page that the license is not based on the same text as the other BSD licenses remains. It's highly relevant to one of the OSI's constituencies, lawyers, who do read licenses with care, do understand the differences and nuances between the ISC and the BSD licenses, and will be aided in their understanding of the requirements of the license by having an explanation of its provenance.

The change was innocently made and it's not clear what problem the dual listing could have caused; the license was at all times still known as the Zero-Clause BSD and any benefit accruing through the use of that name would have remained. The suggestion that there was something untoward going on and the intemperance of some of the emails complaining about it were uncalled for.

Pam


Pamela S. Chestek
Chair, License Committee
Open Source Initiative


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