Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread Richard Watts

On Thursday 30 March 2000, W. Yip
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On Wed, 29 Mar 2000 19:47:29 -0800 (PST), Ken Arromdee [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
But it turns out that that's not what they meant.  The Wired article is just
written poorly.  Someone on Slashdot quoted the actual law that they *were*
referring to:

Having gone through the following, I still fail to see how FSF fits into
the picture. Was wired.com merely doing some publicity for FSF?

---
USC 17 205 E
(e) Priority Between Conflicting Transfer of Ownership and Nonexclusive
License. - A nonexclusive license, whether recorded or not, prevails over a
conflicting transfer of copyright ownership if the license is evidenced by a
written instrument signed by the owner of the rights licensed or such owner's
duly authorized agent, and if - 
(1) the license was taken before execution of the transfer; or 
(2) the license was taken in good faith before recordation of the transfer
and without notice of it. 
---

 IANAL, but from an English perspective, there's nothing in that
 paragraph that says that an informal nonexclusive licence shouldn't
 take priority over a later, formal transfer. In the absence of the
 condition in the clause holding that, the court can make up its own mind.

That *could* mean that if there is a signed contract, then the GPL takes
priority--and conversely, if there wasn't a signed contract, then Mattel's
ownership takes priority.

The above makes sense. *Imagine* Microsoft being bought by XXX company
tomorrow. You do not want to have your license to Windows being revoked
would you (really) ?

 Microsoft couldn't do that anyway: they can't exclusively sell to XXX
 rights they have already contracted away to you - this is just a case
 of selling something twice, and XXX will just have to sue Microsoft
 for it.

 By analogy, if I (M) sold you (A) a car, then sold the same car to B,
B would have the right to sue me for the cost he paid for the car that
was owned by you. He wouldn't have the right to sue you for delivery
up of the car.

 That argument, I think, will work (in the sense of not being fatally
flawed) provided US law treats IP rights as property - UK law does,
but I don't know what US law does in this situation.

 Also, the UK has no such provision, so the GPL should take
precedence.

[snip]
From what you have quoted, the USC 17 205 does *not* address the rub of the
GPL situation, which is about a recurring 'chain of licenses'. It is this
element involving unlimited distribution which Mattel aims to stop.

 Quite. Unfortunately, from the GPL :

-
  1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's
source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you
conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate
copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the
notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty;
and give any other recipients of the Program a copy of this License
along with the Program.

 
 And section 4 goes in the same vein: rights are granted to you to
grant rights to others - the rights do not flow directly from the
authors, so I don't see how Mattel can attack the chain of
distribution.


The USC 17 205 only seems to address the single license, from one
individual to another.

 Again, I don't know about US law, but I don't believe there's
 anything in English law which distinguishes a licence allowing
 sublicencing.

[snip]
It's still a little strained to interpret it that way.  It doesn't say outright
what happens without a signed contract, so it might only mean that it doesn't
*automatically* prevail without one, not that it can't prevail at all.

I think it safe to assume that in absence of a 'written instrument' a
license is exhausted by the act of copyright transfer. 

 Why ?

This is because,
without a 'written instrument' the license is almost certainly a bare
license - ie. plain permission. One cannot claim permission to an article
subsists even after ownership of the article has passed.

 I don't see why: contracts can perfectly happily be informal. The big
problem, AFAICS, is going to be consideration: I'm not sure a court
will buy the idea of fame as a consideration, unless (1) there's
precedent, or (2) it really wants to.

 Other than that, since the GPL doesn't provide any obligations more
binding than those you would have to adhere to anyway if you didn't
accept it, I don't see how there can be consideration. Now, if you
were to modify the GPL so that you agreed to jump up and down twice
every Thursday, that might make it a contract. 

 If you were feeling audacious, you could argue that the lack of
warranty makes consideration - that there would be an implied warranty
if you used the software indirectly, without agreeing to the GPL (for
example, by visiting a website using the software), and that GPL
explicitly disclaims it so you are giving up something valuable. But

RE: Wired Article on the GPL - Signed Licenses?

2000-03-30 Thread Dennis E. Hamilton

Although we are getting far afield from the structure of open-source
licenses, there seem to be some procedural and technical steps someone could
take to ensure that a license is perpetuated, especially for
digitally-conveyed works and licenses to those works.

There are moves afoot to establish the legal acceptability of digital
signatures and their non-repudiation qualities.  I don't want to substitute
technology for common sense, but this does seem to promise a way to be clear
what (1) the licensed work is, and (2) the authenticity of the license (or
even notice).  It might even provide a mechanism for "affixing" a license to
a copy of the work even though the elements are physically separated.

A. USING DIGITAL SIGNATURES TO CONVEY LICENSES

It is interesting that employing digital signatures to establish the
authenticity of open-source distributions is already on the rise.

Here is what I noticed:

1.  If I provide a license statement in digital form, which is digitally
signed, a recipient can confirm whether the license has indeed been signed
according to an accompanying certificate, and whether the document is
unaltered.  That establishes signature and that the license is a true copy
of the signed material.  Then the "usual"  mechanisms come into play with
regard to determining whether (a) the signature is authentic and can be
trusted and is indeed non-repudiatable and (b) whether I have the right to
convey such a license, signed or not.  [That is, we are in the same place
that we are with conventional written instruments.]

2.  I can, as part of the signed license document, provide certificate
information that is usable to confirm signatures on the digital copies of
the covered works themselves.  These can be incorporated in the signed
material of (1), and be an intrinsic part of the signed material.  I see
some weaknesses in this step, but no more so than with the EULA I have in
front of me pertaining to a massive amount of software that I just installed
on my development computer.

3.  Various secure repository (certificate authority) mechanisms are used to
establish the provenance of a digital certificate of particular quality.
Along with this, there can be deposit mechanisms for licenses (just as there
is or at least was a way to record copyright assignments for registered
copyrights).  It would be valuable to have a repository where licenses could
be recorded/deposited so that someone researching the status of a copyright
and its assignments/licenses could find them.  I don't know that the U.S.
Copyright Office would be particularly happy to provide that, but who knows.
It would certainly depend on having registered the copyright, though.

4.  Digital signature techniques are being used to provide more confidence
in the authenticity and provenance of digital material, permitting trust
against substitution of altered or counterfeit works that may be dangerous
to users of the work.  They also provide a level of commitment by an
authentic signer that the work (including the license) is not repudiatable.
None of these provisions prevent someone from forging a work or making
fraudulent exclusive transfers.  It is just harder to do it without
incriminating oneself.  It also depends on due diligence on the part of
recipients of such materials.

B. EARTH TO DENNIS, EARTH TO DENNIS ...

I notice that the EULA I am looking at right now is not "signed" although I
have every reason to believe that it is authentic.  The box within which the
software was packed even had an affixed "certificate of authenticity," and I
guess I should retain that with my EULA, the CD-ROMS, the CD-ROM "key," and
the proof-of-purchase.  I purchased the software over the Internet.  I have
registered myself as the purchaser using the on-line mechanism provided as
part of the software installation process.

I suspect that's quite enough for me and the software vendor, either one, to
establish the likelihood that I have purchased their software and that I am
a party to the accompanying EULA, which I also recall "clicking-through" as
part of the software installation process. I can't imagine what either of us
might do that would have this be in dispute.  I will hold onto the materials
anyhow.

I also notice that there are a number of digital certificates included in
the software collection.  Although a number of them have expired (that is a
problem with these things), I have strong reason to believe that they are
authentic.

-- Dennis

--
Dennis E. Hamilton
InfoNuovo
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
tel. +1-206-779-9430 (gsm)
fax. +1-425-793-0283
http://www.infonuovo.com

-Original Message-
From: W. Yip [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, March 30, 2000 04:43
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Wired Article on the GPL

[ ... ]

---
USC 17 205 E
(e) Priority Between Conflicting Transfer of Ownership and Nonexclusive
License. - A nonexclusive license, whether recorded or not, prevails over a

Re: Two license questions

2000-03-30 Thread John Cowan

Richard Bondi wrote:

 1) I think this belongs on an FAQ at www.opensource.org: if I use one of
 the approved licenses, can I rename it? I'm going to use the Ricoh license
 for my book's code; can I call it the Wiley Open Source Public License
 everywhere?

Nobody is likely to sue you.  The GPL and MPL make explicit provisions for
doing this, and the MIT/BSD and Artistic Licenses have been used this way
forever.  I wouldn't worry about it.  You might want to call it the
"Bondi Open Source Public License", though, as Wiley might not appreciate
your taking their name in vain.

 2) My publisher is very confused about whether they should replace their
 standard CD software statement with the Ricoh license, or put both on the
 page facing the CD.

Their standard license probably incorporates the Ricoh license by reference,
since it speaks of "using the software as described in the software and
the accompanying book", so if your license is present in either place you
are probably OK.

Nevertheless it will confuse people and should be heaved out.

 Do they contradict each other because the Wiley
 statement says "All rights reserved"? What confuses me is that the Ricoh
 license's Exhibit says "All Rights Reserved:" doesn't it actually grant a
 ton of rights?!!

No and yes, respectively.

It used to be that a notice of copyright (the thing that says "Copyright
2000 so-and-so") wasn't effective in some countries without the magic
words "All Rights Reserved", whether those rights were then licensed
to anyone or not.  This is no longer true anywhere (I think) but
publishers insert it out of habit.  It has no effect on your license.

Disclaimer: IANAL.

-- 

Schlingt dreifach einen Kreis um dies! || John Cowan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Schliesst euer Aug vor heiliger Schau,  || http://www.reutershealth.com
Denn er genoss vom Honig-Tau,   || http://www.ccil.org/~cowan
Und trank die Milch vom Paradies.-- Coleridge (tr. Politzer)



Re: Wired Article on the GPL - Signed Licenses?

2000-03-30 Thread John Cowan

"Dennis E. Hamilton" wrote:

 I notice that the EULA I am looking at right now is not "signed" although I
 have every reason to believe that it is authentic.

The statutory requirement applies to copyright licenses, which the GPL is
but the EULA is not.

-- 

Schlingt dreifach einen Kreis um dies! || John Cowan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Schliesst euer Aug vor heiliger Schau,  || http://www.reutershealth.com
Denn er genoss vom Honig-Tau,   || http://www.ccil.org/~cowan
Und trank die Milch vom Paradies.-- Coleridge (tr. Politzer)



Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread Chip Salzenberg

According to Mark Wielaard:
 But the main document (the actual essay cp4break.html) says:
 "The source is included, and you can do whatever you want with it."
 "You are allowed to mirror this document and the related files anywhere you
 see fit."

Well, that about wraps it up for Mattel.  Or it should, anyway.  :-(
-- 
Chip Salzenberg  - a.k.a. -  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
"I wanted to play hopscotch with the impenetrable mystery of existence,
but he stepped in a wormhole and had to go in early."  // MST3K



Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread Chip Salzenberg

According to W . Yip:
 A purchaser, particularly a bona fide one, may not know anything
 about the licenses attached to a copyright which he is purchasing,
 and thus deserves protection from copyright holders who may be
 dishonest.

Surely, though, that theory doesn't help Mattel -- they *did* know
about the free distribution license of cphack.  It was what drew their
attention in the first place!
-- 
Chip Salzenberg  - a.k.a. -  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
"I wanted to play hopscotch with the impenetrable mystery of existence,
but he stepped in a wormhole and had to go in early."  // MST3K



Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread John Cowan

Chip Salzenberg wrote:

 But I would consider it obvious that, once I have been granted me a
 license to copy, neither the original copyright holder nor his assigns
 have the authority to stop me.  In other words, the license adheres to
 the code, not the author.

Not obvious, probably not true.  Licenses are personal, in general, 
and a license that isn't a contract (a bare permission)
can be freely revoked by the licensor, as in an invitation to enter onto
land: if the landowner changes his mind, the licensee instantly becomes
a trespasser.

-- 

Schlingt dreifach einen Kreis um dies! || John Cowan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Schliesst euer Aug vor heiliger Schau,  || http://www.reutershealth.com
Denn er genoss vom Honig-Tau,   || http://www.ccil.org/~cowan
Und trank die Milch vom Paradies.-- Coleridge (tr. Politzer)



Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread Chip Salzenberg

According to John Cowan:
 Chip Salzenberg wrote:
  In other words, the license adheres to the code, not the author.
 
 A license that isn't a contract (a bare permission) can be freely
 revoked by the licensor, as in an invitation to enter onto land: if
 the landowner changes his mind, the licensee instantly becomes a
 trespasser.

*shock*  *dismay*

I never thought I'd say this, but:  'Only UCITA can save us now.'
-- 
Chip Salzenberg  - a.k.a. -  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
"I wanted to play hopscotch with the impenetrable mystery of existence,
but he stepped in a wormhole and had to go in early."  // MST3K



Re: loophole in the GPL?

2000-03-30 Thread John Cowan

Justin Wells wrote:

 The GPL says that if I "distribute" copies then I must provide source. I,
 however, maintain that I am doing no such thing--I am *selling* copies,
 transfering my ownership of that copy to someone else, not distributing
 them.

The term "distribute" must be understood in the sense in which it is
used in the Copyright Act.  The term is not actually defined there, but
is used thus:  "distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work
to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or
lending".  So selling copies is a type, indeed the primary type, of distribution.
 
This argument also fails the "laugh test"; if your argument makes the
judge laugh (derisively), don't expect a decision in your favor.

"How many legs does a dog have, if you call its tail a leg?"
"Four. Calling the tail a leg doesn't make it one."
--Abraham Lincoln

-- 

Schlingt dreifach einen Kreis um dies! || John Cowan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Schliesst euer Aug vor heiliger Schau,  || http://www.reutershealth.com
Denn er genoss vom Honig-Tau,   || http://www.ccil.org/~cowan
Und trank die Milch vom Paradies.-- Coleridge (tr. Politzer)



RE: Wired Article -- Nullifying a GPL?

2000-03-30 Thread Dennis E. Hamilton

I looked at what I could find on Wired, thanks to the Slashdot discussion
and its links.

1.  UNRESOLVED QUESTIONS?

One problem I notice is that we don't have a finding with regard to the
validity of the copyright by the original distributors of cphack.  Part of
the Mattel claim was that this work was the product of an infringement.

I gather that the parties have settled, but I don't know what has been
stipulated concerning the validity of the cphack copyright and therefore any
purported licensing of it.  The cited property transfer is prudently
noncommittal on that score.  I would say that leaves much of the "fiasco" in
place, depending on what the judge makes of all of this.

I have neither information nor further opinion about the actual case.

2.  HEY BUDDY, WANNA BUY A WATCH?  GENUINE ROLEX!

I do see an interesting question over what happens when any published work
is tainted by a problem over the ownership of the intellectual property
embodied therein.  I've never heard of anything that will insulate a
recipient of software from the consequences of that material not being the
property of the supplier/license-writer.  I've seen contracts that held a
purchaser harmless from any intellectual property issue, but they were
written by suppliers who could be reasonably counted on to perform, and the
monetary considerations were considerable (e.g., purchase of large mainframe
computer systems).  I don't notice anything about that in the 7-page
software EULA I happen to have in front of me.  I do notice that section 7
of the GPL (Version 2, June 1991) does have language which may be pertinent
and which may have bearing in the Mattel-cphack case too.

The outcomes tend to be limited to what is practical.  But willful
redistribution of a tainted work (e.g., copies of a believed-to-be-pirated
audio recording or electronic novel) is not smart behavior, any more than is
quickly reselling an automobile that you purchased with the strong suspicion
that it was stolen.  Or hastily spending that $20 bill you were given that
you are pretty sure is counterfeit.  So, "do you feel lucky, ...?"

I have no basis for determining or assuming that the GPL-ing of cphack has
been nullified or made void.  I do think we are seeing an area where
trustworthy sources become important.  In particular, the presence (or in
this case, simple mention) of the GPL in material, as for any license,
depends for its authority on the legitimacy of the claim of property right
on which the license is founded.

Of course, we will trust these things.  But I think it is important to
understand that it is all about trust relationships.  Sometimes, these don't
work out, and we are left with a challenge to behave responsibly and
diligently.

-- Dennis

-Original Message-
From: Chip Salzenberg [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Chip
Salzenberg
Sent: Thursday, March 30, 2000 10:16
To: W . Yip
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Wired Article on the GPL


According to W . Yip:
 On Wed, 29 Mar 2000 15:49:49 -0800, Chip Salzenberg [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
 By releasing under the GPL, the original authors surrendered their
 right to control GPL-compatible copying.  Having surrendered that
 right, the original authors are not able to transfer it.

 Mattel's lawyers would certainly disagree with you on this one. They
 probably would stand by their contract and claim that copyright has been
 assigned to them.

Oh, I won't argue that point.  Mattel certainly owns the copyright.

But I would consider it obvious that, once I have been granted me a
license to copy, neither the original copyright holder nor his assigns
have the authority to stop me.  In other words, the license adheres to
the code, not the author.

Frankly, I'm stunned that Mattel is even bringing this argument.
They (or the department in question) must be in a full-blown panic.
--
Chip Salzenberg  - a.k.a. -  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
"I wanted to play hopscotch with the impenetrable mystery of existence,
but he stepped in a wormhole and had to go in early."  // MST3K




Re: loophole in the GPL?

2000-03-30 Thread Seth David Schoen

Justin Wells writes:

 On Thu, Mar 30, 2000 at 02:52:38PM -0500, John Cowan wrote:
 
  The term "distribute" must be understood in the sense in which it is
  used in the Copyright Act.  The term is not actually defined there, but
  is used thus:  "distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work
  to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or
  lending".  So selling copies is a type, indeed the primary type,
  of distribution.
 
 However, I thought it was well established that a copyright license 
 CANNOT prevent you from selling your copy of a copyrighted work.

Mmmm, I think you're glossing over what "your copy" means here.  I imagine
that you're referring to the "first sale" doctrine, which restricts the
ability of copyright holders to restrict resale of copies _that they
sell_.  First sale does not restrict the ability of copyright holders to
restrict resale of copies _that other people make_.

 Once you have legally acquired a copy, you CAN sell it.

That would be neat, because then you could make "fair use" copies for
yourself, and then they would be legal, so you could sell them.  The
people you sold them to would then have legal copies, so they could
make fair use copies, and then those copies would be legal, too, and
they could sell them...

This would be neat, but I don't think copyright law quite works that
way.

-- 
Seth David Schoen [EMAIL PROTECTED]  | And do not say, I will study when I
Temp.  http://www.loyalty.org/~schoen/  | have leisure; for perhaps you will
down:  http://www.loyalty.org/   (CAF)  | not have leisure.  -- Pirke Avot 2:5



Re: loophole in the GPL?

2000-03-30 Thread Justin Wells

On Thu, Mar 30, 2000 at 12:56:54PM -0800, Seth David Schoen wrote:

 Mmmm, I think you're glossing over what "your copy" means here.  I imagine
 that you're referring to the "first sale" doctrine, which restricts the
 ability of copyright holders to restrict resale of copies _that they
 sell_.  First sale does not restrict the ability of copyright holders to
 restrict resale of copies _that other people make_.

OK, that's the answer I was looking for. So, why can't book sellers 
restrict the resale of books by selling a copy to a distributor, and
letting the distributor make the copies that are sold to the public?

Justin




Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread Ken Arromdee

On Thu, 30 Mar 2000, Chip Salzenberg wrote:
  A license that isn't a contract (a bare permission) can be freely
  revoked by the licensor, as in an invitation to enter onto land: if
  the landowner changes his mind, the licensee instantly becomes a
  trespasser.
 I never thought I'd say this, but:  'Only UCITA can save us now.'

IANAL, but there's always the possibility of a court ruling that recipients of
GPL software are providing consideration, so it's a contract.  If you
distribute a binary, the consideration might be that you distribute the
source.  Putting one's own code under GPL if linked with GPL might also be
consideration--I don't think consideration has to directly benefit the
original copyright owner to count as consideration.

The FSF really should get involved in this, because the implications of this
question are obviously pretty big.




Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread Chip Salzenberg

According to Nils Lohner:
 This does not make sense.  If I bought the software, and the license
 is changed afterwards, I have to abide by a new license?

No, no, you've confused license with contract.  If you buy the
software, then there is an exchange of considerations, so there
is a (sale) contract involved, and all the rules change.
-- 
Chip Salzenberg  - a.k.a. -  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
"I wanted to play hopscotch with the impenetrable mystery of existence,
but he stepped in a wormhole and had to go in early."  // MST3K



Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread John Cowan

Nils Lohner wrote:

 This does not make sense.  If I bought the software, and the license is
 changed afterwards, I have to abide by a new license?  I would argue that I
 should have to abide by the license under which I bought it as I have never
 had a chance to acept or reject the other license.  Use your imagination to
 add some fun clauses to new license :)  Somehow this does not seem logical,
 reasonable, etc.

Remember that we are talking about the GPL here, not some random proprietary
license.  The GPL grants you permissions to take certain actions provided you
meet certain conditions.  The actions are copying, distributing, and
making derivative works.  You neither accept nor reject the GPL; it grants
you permissions whether you want them or not.

If the copyright owner revokes the permissions, you are probably out of luck.

-- 

Schlingt dreifach einen Kreis um dies! || John Cowan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Schliesst euer Aug vor heiliger Schau,  || http://www.reutershealth.com
Denn er genoss vom Honig-Tau,   || http://www.ccil.org/~cowan
Und trank die Milch vom Paradies.-- Coleridge (tr. Politzer)



Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread Richard Watts

On Thursday 30 March 2000, Nils Lohner
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Chip Salzenberg writes:
According to John Cowan:
 Chip Salzenberg wrote:
  In other words, the license adheres to the code, not the author.
 
 A license that isn't a contract (a bare permission) can be freely
 revoked by the licensor, as in an invitation to enter onto land: if
 the landowner changes his mind, the licensee instantly becomes a
 trespasser.

*shock*  *dismay*

I never thought I'd say this, but:  'Only UCITA can save us now.'

This does not make sense.  If I bought the software, and the license is 
changed afterwards, I have to abide by a new license? 

 No. If you buy the software, there's a contract, and that contract is
 binding. It's only if you get the software completely free, without
 having to give anything (valuable) away for it that there is no
 contract, because a contract requires a valuable consideration from
 both parties.

 Though ISTR that some European legal systems do recognise the
existence of gratuitous contracts, so the Frenchmen in the audience
may be safe(r). Don't count on it though - IANAL...

 I would argue that I 
should have to abide by the license under which I bought it as I have never 
had a chance to acept or reject the other license.  

 If Mattel change the licence, you aren't necessarily bound by the new
licence - you can choose to destroy your copies of the software and
walk away. Indeed, it doesn't seem likely that Mattel will be
licencing this particular bit of software at all :-).



Richard.



Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread Matthew C. Weigel

On Thu, 30 Mar 2000, John Cowan wrote:

 Remember that we are talking about the GPL here, not some random
 proprietary license.  The GPL grants you permissions to take certain
 actions provided you meet certain conditions.  The actions are copying,
 distributing, and making derivative works.  You neither accept nor reject
 the GPL; it grants you permissions whether you want them or not.

Ummm... yes, you can accept or reject the GPL, if I understand it correctly. 
You either accept the terms of the license -- the restrictions placed on
distribution, for instance -- or you don't, and if you don't, you have no
legal recourse for distribution.

I haven't been following this discussion too closely (I have, in fact, made
several attempts to unsubscribe per the directions sent to me when I
subscribed), but regardless of whether a license is very restrictive, and
regardless of whether the author of the license chooses to call it a
"copyleft," it's a license granting rights over copyrighted material.  If
you choose to not accept the license, then you can't use the software.

Of course, there's no reason to *not* accept the GPL, if you're not planning
on doing any distribution or derivative works, since your use is not
restricted.  But it's still an option.

 If the copyright owner revokes the permissions, you are probably out of
 luck.

Can a copyright owner revoke a license which has no 'revocation' clause?  It
seems that other licenses, such as the APSL, were scrupulous in including
such a clause so as to be able to revoke the license.

 Matthew Weigel
 Programmer/Sysadmin/Student
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread John Cowan

"Matthew C. Weigel" wrote:

 Ummm... yes, you can accept or reject the GPL, if I understand it correctly.
 You either accept the terms of the license -- the restrictions placed on
 distribution, for instance -- or you don't, and if you don't, you have no
 legal recourse for distribution.

You can "accept" the GPL by exercising your rights under the GPL in accordance
with its terms, or you can "reject" the GPL by not exercising your rights.
But this is not acceptance as understood in discussing contracts.  That
would be like saying you "reject" your constitutional right of free speech
by remaining silent.  You still have your rights, you just aren't exercising
them.  And if what you want is to shout "Fire!" in a crowded theatre (when
there is no fire), your free speech rights will not help you.

 If you choose to not accept the license, then you can't use the software.

Definitely not true of GPLed software.  You may not copy, distribute, or
create derivative works except under the terms of the GPL.  But you can use
the software on one machine or many; you can study the software to determine
how it does what it does, etc. etc.

In this way the GPL is unlike proprietary licenses, where indeed you cannot
use the software unless you have accepted the license (but under UCITA,
using counts as accepting).

  If the copyright owner revokes the permissions, you are probably out of
  luck.
 
 Can a copyright owner revoke a license which has no 'revocation' clause?  It
 seems that other licenses, such as the APSL, were scrupulous in including
 such a clause so as to be able to revoke the license.

Sure.  If I grant you bare permission to do something, with no reciprocal
promise on your part, I can change my mind whenever I like, thus:

"Here, use my carno, I lied.  You can't."

The previous license will not help you now.
 
-- 

Schlingt dreifach einen Kreis um dies! || John Cowan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Schliesst euer Aug vor heiliger Schau,  || http://www.reutershealth.com
Denn er genoss vom Honig-Tau,   || http://www.ccil.org/~cowan
Und trank die Milch vom Paradies.-- Coleridge (tr. Politzer)



Re: Wired Article on the GPL

2000-03-30 Thread Justin Wells

On Thu, Mar 30, 2000 at 04:39:10PM -0500, John Cowan wrote:

 Remember that we are talking about the GPL here, not some random proprietary
 license.  The GPL grants you permissions to take certain actions provided you
 meet certain conditions.  The actions are copying, distributing, and
 making derivative works.  You neither accept nor reject the GPL; it grants
 you permissions whether you want them or not.
 
 If the copyright owner revokes the permissions, you are probably out of luck.

If this is true, it's awful. That means that I can release some software
for "free" under the GPL, wait until everyone is using it, and then 
suddenly say "Hey guys, guess what? I feel like getting rich--please 
all send me $5000 or stop using my software. I revoke the GPL." 

That CAN'T be right. If it is right, we need a quick revision to the
GPL to fix this problem.

Justin




Re: License

2000-03-30 Thread Jim Jagielski

Justin Wells wrote:
 
 The consensus on the list ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) has been 
 that you should draft a license which you think fits the definition
 and simply start using it. If your software is important enough to 
 draw attention, then sooner or later someone will be interested in
 seeing to it that your license is compliant. At that point one of
 the OSI principals would likely approach you and your license would
 wind its way through the approval process.
 
 If you post your license to the license-discuss list you WILL likely
 get some useful feedback, but no approval, unless you are high 
 profile enough. In which case, go to Perens, etc., directly rather
 than via the list.
 

Well, it appears to me that Apache is kinda important enough and
would have drawn at least some attention. But what do I know???

PS: Yep, I'm CCing to to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

-- 
===
   Jim Jagielski   [|]   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   [|]   http://www.jaguNET.com/
"Are you suggesting coconuts migrate??"



Re: License

2000-03-30 Thread Derek J. Balling

At 07:18 PM 3/30/00 -0500, Jim Jagielski wrote:
Justin Wells wrote:
 
  The consensus on the list ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) has been
  that you should draft a license which you think fits the definition
  and simply start using it. If your software is important enough to
  draw attention, then sooner or later someone will be interested in
  seeing to it that your license is compliant. At that point one of
  the OSI principals would likely approach you and your license would
  wind its way through the approval process.
 
  If you post your license to the license-discuss list you WILL likely
  get some useful feedback, but no approval, unless you are high
  profile enough. In which case, go to Perens, etc., directly rather
  than via the list.
 

Well, it appears to me that Apache is kinda important enough and
would have drawn at least some attention. But what do I know???

PS: Yep, I'm CCing to to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Honestly, I'll be impressed if anyone "official" even notices. Color me 
crazy, but I don't think anyone pays attention to the license-discuss list 
anymore except for us "peons". :(

D