Cindy advice is best but the quick and dirty answer for you given the two 
things you stated:

  *   We do not modify or enhance the open source code of the used libraries.
  *   At last, our code must be kept as proprietary and we don’t consider 
providing the source code using the opens source libraries.

Good:  Apache, BSD, MIT and other permissively licensed open source code.

Maybe Good:  LGPL, MPL and weak copyleft licensed open source code.

Not Good:  GPL and any strong copyleft licensed open source code.

Review your code base and anything that used GPL source code in an Android/iOS 
app or Windows/MacOS/Linux program is an issue.  On your internal server if you 
used any AGPL code it may be an issue.

Your normal lawyer should be able to find you an IP lawyer but you might as 
well start going over your code base.

Regards,

Nigel

From: License-discuss 
<license-discuss-boun...@opensource.org<mailto:license-discuss-boun...@opensource.org>>
 on behalf of Cinly Ooi <cinly....@gmail.com<mailto:cinly....@gmail.com>>
Reply-To: "c...@theiet.org<mailto:c...@theiet.org>" 
<c...@theiet.org<mailto:c...@theiet.org>>, License Discuss 
<license-discuss@opensource.org<mailto:license-discuss@opensource.org>>
Date: Monday, November 28, 2016 at 7:51 AM
To: License Discuss 
<license-discuss@opensource.org<mailto:license-discuss@opensource.org>>
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] Using opensource in a company not in the 
software business

You _are_ in the software business.

The correct person to evaluate your case is your lawyer.

As Woolley said, regardless of which the license of the software you choose 
uses, you still have responsibility under open source license, and your 
customers have expectations as provided for by the license.

It is the same whether it is open source license or close source license

Your lawyer will look at each license you need to use and apply it to see 
whether it meets your business objective.

Another good place to start is to see is there any local people who can talk 
you through it for the price of a coffee. However, your lawyer has the final 
say.


Best Regards,
Cinly

*****
“There should not be an over-emphasis on what computers tell you, because they 
only tell you what you tell them to tell you,” -- Joe Sutter, Boeing 747 Chief 
Engineer.

On 28 November 2016 at 10:23, FREJAVILLE Etienne 
<etienne.frejavi...@coface.com<mailto:etienne.frejavi...@coface.com>> wrote:
Hello,

I'm sorry for asking a question that has probably been answered in the past, 
but I couldn't find a clear and precise answer on the subject on your website 
or any web resource.

We are a private company and we wonder how to deal with developments using open 
source.

First of all we are not a software company, and therefore we just provide 
software applications to our customers, so that they can use our services/buy 
our products.

We develop with code that may use opensource, both:

- 1. Pure internal software
- 2. Software for our customers provided as Web applications (that obviously 
interacts with a part of our internal software).
- 3. Software for our customers provided as mobile applications (IOS&Android 
apps) that interacts with a part of our internal software.

The usage we make of opensource, is either use the opensource products as 
standalone products (e.g Maven, Kados..), or use them ‘as is’ as libraries 
(most java or javascript) (e.g POI, jQuery...).
We do not modify or enhance the open source code of the used libraries.
At last, our code must be kept as proprietary and we don’t consider providing 
the source code using the opens source libraries.

I have read quite a few pages on the opensource.org<http://opensource.org> 
website, the FAQ and other external papers, but it seems that the licences 
discussions and restrictions, concern most of the time the usage of the open 
source in commercial products, or concern the distribution of open sources 
modifications.

First of all, I would like to know if a software provided to our customers in 
our case, is considered in the open source terminology as a 'customer product'.
Second, I would like to understand what 'distribution' stands for. Is 
distributing a web application or mobile application considered 'distribution' ?
We provide some binary code that may contain usages of open source libraries, 
to some of our subsidiaries. Is it also considered as 'distribution' ?

The idea behind these questions is to know if in fact we have to care about 
using Open source software or not in our situation..

If indeed we provide a commercial product and we are considering distributing 
software that may require the usage of opensource libraries for being able to 
work, indeed, I guess we are concerned by Open source usage.
If it's the case, I will have more precise questions regarding the usage we 
make of these libraries, to understand what licences we may use and what we may 
not.

Thank you.
**********************************************************************
Le groupe Coface, un leader mondial de l'assurance-crédit, propose aux 
entreprises du monde entier des solutions pour les protéger contre le risque de 
défaillance financière de leurs clients. Ses 4 400 collaborateurs assurent un 
service de proximité dans 67 pays.

The Coface Group, a worldwide leader in credit insurance, offers companies 
around the globe solutions to protect them against the risk of financial 
default of their clients. 4 400 staff in 67 countries provide a local service 
worldwide.


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