Ben Tilly wrote:

> According to the statute as shown at 
> https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/35/271, patent law covers selling and 
> importing.  Which by my reading means that it does impact distribution of 
> software, even if you do not run it.

 

I don't read the law quite that way. Certainly selling or importing a product 
that contains patented software for its intended use would be infringing. But 
merely importing or distributing source code that is licensed under CC0 does 
not infringe. I'd call it free speech.

 

Other opinions?

 

/Larry

 

 

From: Ben Tilly [mailto:bti...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 7, 2017 4:27 PM
To: Lawrence Rosen <lro...@rosenlaw.com>; License Discuss 
<license-discuss@opensource.org>
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] patent rights and the OSD

 

[<LER>]  

IANALTINLA and all that.

 

On Tue, Mar 7, 2017 at 3:57 PM, Lawrence Rosen <lro...@rosenlaw.com 
<mailto:lro...@rosenlaw.com> > wrote:

Christopher Sean Morrison wrote:

> Software patents are terrible in part because they pertain to the source code 
> itself, thus affecting the distribution terms on that code.

 

Patents don't pertain to source code or to code distribution, at least not in 
legal terms of direct patent infringement. Patent rights pertain to the "use" 
of the software, not its written description.

 

Patents are already described as publicly as open source code (see USPTO.gov), 
but one is under patent law and the other under copyright law. This openness of 
publication under patent law is on purpose, although with the flood of software 
patents and their obscure language, this publication openness is not very 
helpful to creators of copyrighted software. But this doesn't affect source 
code or its distribution, certainly not literally in the many jurisdictions 
where the patents are ineffective, nor in the U.S. 

 

Where this discussion can go awry is when we interpret the OSD too broadly with 
respect to patents. The OSD can be clarified or amended, but at its birth 
nobody fully understood software patents. After reading the CC letter to the 
White House (https://github.com/WhiteHouse/source-code-policy/issues/149), I 
can agree it is a complicated problem. 

 

/Larry

 

 

From: License-discuss [mailto:license-discuss-boun...@opensource.org 
<mailto:license-discuss-boun...@opensource.org> ] On Behalf Of Christopher Sean 
Morrison
Sent: Tuesday, March 7, 2017 3:10 PM
To: license-discuss@opensource.org <mailto:license-discuss@opensource.org> 
Cc: License Discuss <license-discuss@opensource.org>
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] patent rights and the OSD

 

 


On Mar 07, 2017, at 04:45 PM, Ben Tilly <bti...@gmail.com 
<mailto:bti...@gmail.com> > wrote:

When we talk about whether a software license is OSD compliant, we are only 
addressing the question of whether this license restricts software under 
copyright law in a way that violates the OSD.

 

I hear you, but I don't see where the OSD says that.  It does not mention 
copyright law.  The OSD annotated or otherwise doesn't even mention the word 
'copy'.  It (specifically?) says "the distribution terms". 

 

While I certainly can understand the perspective that there are other laws, 
regulations, and factors, not all of them affect distribution terms of the 
software -- they are restrictions on me, my assets, my situation, not the 
software.  Software patents are terrible in part because they pertain to the 
source code itself, thus affecting the distribution terms on that code.

 

In a way, it's convenient that the OSD does not specifically call out copyright 
and speaks generically.  It's a testament of forethought (or luck) of the 
original authors.

 

Cheers!

Sean

 

 


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