Mike Milinkovich wrote:

In my view, the purely pragmatic answers to "why are choice of law provisions 
in open source licenses disfavored" are:

1.      Many lawyers don't like them. In my experience there were lots of 
lawyers who found the EPL-1.0 USA-centric because of its choice of law 
provision and avoided it as a result. E.g. why would a German automaker want to 
contribute code under a license that stipulates US law when they go to great 
lengths to shield their company from US law? Telling them that the lawsuit 
could still proceed in a German court did not give them much comfort. 

Mike, I worked for several years at and for Siemens, a German company, and I 
understood completely why they didn’t want to acquire software from (e.g) a US 
company that might subject them to US jurisdictions – in particular the 
discovery rules of US businesses in (e.g.) North Carolina or Texas. That is a 
completely valid concern. That is why I drafted the OSL/AFL 3.0 jurisdictional 
provision as I did. All sophisticated German automakers will acquire important 
software from US companies that conduct their primary businesses in (e.g.) 
Germany. They will not sign contracts directly with engineers who work 
exclusively in their (e.g.) North Carolina or Texas garages. They are not 
stupid software users!

 

I wish that you had consulted attorneys who paid more attention to legal 
provisions in US-drafted software licenses that DON’T STIPULATE US LAW! You 
wasted your money paying them for legal advice. And by now relying on software 
licenses that omit a choice of jurisdiction provision entirely as if that would 
resolve their issue. Their advice was incompetent.

 

11) Jurisdiction, Venue and Governing Law. Any action or suit relating to this 
License may be brought only in the courts of a jurisdiction wherein the 
Licensor resides or in which Licensor conducts its primary business, and under 
the laws of that jurisdiction excluding its conflict-of-law provisions. The 
application of the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International 
Sale of Goods is expressly excluded. Any use of the Original Work outside the 
scope of this License or after its termination shall be subject to the 
requirements and penalties of copyright or patent law in the appropriate 
jurisdiction. This section shall survive the termination of this License. 
[OSL/AFL section 11.]

 

/Larry

 

Lawrence Rosen

707-478-8932

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