Quoting Christopher Allan Webber ([email protected]): > Well, you aren't the only one to have a meta-problem with it; I do too, > and yet I'm the submitter. "Is it a license" is one of the questions I > mused over, a kind of copyright existentialism (what, like, is a license > anyway man?). Is it valid?
I think it's clearly valid in the sense of conveying bundles of rights that otherwise would have been reserved to copyright owners -- indeed, does so in the recipient's choice of (IIRC) 94 different ways. In a strictly mechanistic sense, it _licenses_ (verb); one might judge that anything that licenses is a licence. However, there's really nothing to approve in its body text. What OSI would need to examine and certify would be the licences it references. > For consideration, maybe or maybe not. You're joking, I hope. If so, well done. Such an arid sense of humour is rare outside us of the Scandinavian cultures. > It's probably valid legally; the source of inspiration for this was > considering the "compatible license" provisions of the CC licenses: Another way to think of it is that you've taken dual-licensing to just about the furthest possible extreme. BTW, why no comment on my suggestion that a metalicence offering a choice of the ~70 OSI Certified licences would be slightly more reasonable when talking to OSI than is one hinging on FSF's smorgasbord of 90 free software licences + two FSF-approved failures + two FSF-screwed-up-and-approved non-licences? Not that you owe one, but I'm curious. [Rob Myers:] > "v2 should also include nonfree licenses." > https://twitter.com/robmyers/status/665306134043996160 As long as we're musing, don't _all_ open source (free-software) licences already include a limited aleph-nought infinity of implicit proprietary (non-free) licences? E.g., your right to use the bsdutils for any purpose provided you obey the advertising clause, agree there's no warranties, and preserve the copyright notice and licence terms, implies also permission subject to those terms plus the requirement that you pay Rick Moen US $100 and use the code only to manage tuba quartets. However, and hoping not to be rude about this, a thing being true doesn't necessarily make it interesting. Speaking for myself, I can't justify much time spent on gedankenexperiments without at some insight beyond 'permissive licensing implictly includes non-permissive permissions'). [CC0:] > I didn't return to read that thread, because I'm afraid I'm all too > familiar with it. Which is to say: check the headers on who submitted > and withdrew. I won't... while I'm still interested in a revision to > CC0 that could be accepted on this list, and which resolves what I do > think are valid concerns raised, I lost a good month of my life > agonizing over it the last time. Well, I sympathise. And you can perhaps empathise with people grown wary of the recent years' flurry of strange permissive licences, who begrudge the time OSI is continually asked to spend examining them without real benefit. _______________________________________________ License-discuss mailing list [email protected] https://lists.opensource.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/license-discuss

