In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Alex Martelli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: . . . >One last reflection -- I believe there are or used to be some programs >written by people no doubt of very good will, distributed with all >sources and often with no profit motive at all, which are NOT open >source because they include in the license some restrictive clause, such >as "no military use", "no use by organizations which perform testing of >cosmetics on animals", or something of that kind. These would be >examples of closed-source software which DO allow ALMOST any kind of use >-- any EXCEPT the specific one the authors dislike so intensely. > >While most people may not think of such programs as "closed source", >they most definitely ARE: the definition of open source is very strict >about this aspect. > > >Alex
With my mathematical background, I'm consistent about calling these "non-open" rather than "closed". I don't insist others adopt my nomenclature ... -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list