> I am having trouble finding a benefit that would come from fixing it, > that we don't already have from short-and-sweet licenses like BSD.
So, what makes unlicense and these public domain statements alluring is that they serve as vehicles for their authors make a statement about public policy. The MIT/BSD simply don't make a public statement this way, and hence, they don't have that sort of irresistable attraction. I think what CC0 has taught us is that this same public policy vigor should be directed towards intellectual property broadly, including an abandonment of patent and database rights as well as copyright. > What you would to be "as good as" BSD would be a public domain > declaration coupled with a covebroanant not-to-sue that extends to the > patent claims of the dedicator that are necessary to utilize the work > as it was dedicated. And a warranty disclaimer to protect the donor. *nods* > It ends up not being shorter nor simpler. How short could it be though? I suggest we get a "github" or other repository, put in some draft language, and hack at it. Perhaps we could help the original authors of Unlicense produce a 2.0 version that adds "we hate patents too!" feature that would be worth upgrading? Best, Clark _______________________________________________ License-discuss mailing list License-discuss@opensource.org http://projects.opensource.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/license-discuss