(This seems appropriate for both license-discuss@ and license-review@, so I'm posting it in both places.)
I've been seeing an increasing number of inquiries about the public domain and open source, and about CC0 and open source. A few of those inquiries have come here, but I'm also getting them elsewhere. So I've tried to formulate good answers: http://opensource.org/faq#public-domain http://opensource.org/faq#cc-zero I hope I've reflected the general consensus of the License Review committee accurately, not made any legal mistakes, etc. I'd appreciate feedback on these. The "public domain" entry is complex. It felt wrong to simply say that PD is not open source, when it clearly exhibits most or all of the important properties of Open Source and is at least capable of meeting the OSD; on the other hand, it is not a license and therefore cannot be OSI-approved, and it has some portability problems. So I've tried to express all of that in the answer, and recommend that people use OSI-approved licenses wherever possible. The CC0 entry is more straightforward, but also would benefit from peer review. Please hold the flamethrowers, anyone who might be tempted to flame, and remember that these are inherently contentious and complicated subjects! It would be easier for the OSI to just say nothing on the topics :-), but silence on these questions would not serve our mission very well. Thanks, -Karl _______________________________________________ License-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://projects.opensource.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/license-discuss

