Hi there - We are building a professional open source company and are curious which open source license you suggest we use. Our goal is to build a profitable company around dual licensing - providing an open source version of our product and a commercial version of the product. We feel that a software company built around an open source product will first significantly reduce our sales and marketing costs. Second, we expect the open source version will greatly reduce barriers-to-entry to our product from both a partner ecosystem perspective and more importantly a customer acquisition perspective. Finally, we flat out believe that delivering an open source product will enable users/customers to have a more direct voice in the building of the product which will result in a better product. We plan to translate this combination of factors into a lower cost product offering that will delight end-users. Our goals for the open source license and commercial license are: 1. Enable partners and customers to easily enhance/enrich/expand the product through "GPL-like" conditions 2. Allow our company to roll 'contributed open source code' into our commercial release. What do you think about the Mozilla Public License? Or the eCos open source license ( <http://ecos.sourceware.org/license-overview.html> http://ecos.sourceware.org/license-overview.html) 3. The ability to sell our open source code line as a commercial release a. With additional modules contributed to our open source project b. With additional value-add modules not in the open source product c. With full support, maintenance, warranty and indemnification
So with that said, which open source license do you think best meets those goals? I appreciate your advice. Clint Clint Oram Co-Founder and VP Products & Services [EMAIL PROTECTED] (650) 315-6321 SUGARCRM Inc. It's a sweet deal. Startup in residence at the SDForum <http://www.sdforum.org/> http://www.sdforum.org -- license-discuss archive is at http://crynwr.com/cgi-bin/ezmlm-cgi?3

