Re: [HACKERS] proposed improvements to PostgreSQL license - Mailing list pgsql-general
From | Peter Eisentraut |
---|---|
Subject | Re: [HACKERS] proposed improvements to PostgreSQL license |
Date | |
Msg-id | Pine.LNX.4.21.0007031921150.355-100000@localhost.localdomain Whole thread Raw |
In response to | proposed improvements to PostgreSQL license (Ned Lilly <ned@greatbridge.com>) |
Responses |
Re: Re: [HACKERS] proposed improvements to PostgreSQL
license
|
List | pgsql-general |
Ned Lilly writes: > What we'd like to propose is a general tightening up of what the > existing license is *supposed* to be doing in the first place - In order to tighten up the license you'd need to get every developer past, present, and future to sign paperwork that they agree to this change. > protecting the developers who worked on the code, I've said it before and I'll say it again: If you, as a developer, want to "protect" yourself, talk to a lawyer licensed in your jurisdiction, and not "one East coast" and "one West coast". And don't trust any untested licenses based on a law that will potentially be overturned in the Supreme Court anyway. > and ensuring that the code stays open source in perpetuity. No, that's what the GPL does. > Second, and admittedly of significant importance to Great Bridge, the > commercial proliferation of PostgreSQL could be hindered if business > users are concerned that the license might not cover the substantial > additions and improvements made to the code over the last few years. How can you guarantee them that none of the code now is under a different license (because it was ripped off somewhere) or under patent restrictions? Or for that matter, how can you guarantee it in the future? What do you say to anyone that comes along and says "This is my code, it shouldn't be here"? Will you go back to the logs and prove that he "contributed or submitted" it and is therefore bound to the license? Changing the license wording might satisfy the suits, but it doesn't change reality a bit. It just creates more legal uncertainty for users at that point. The least thing we need is Yet Another Open Source License. To my knowledge, the BSD license has been used in one form or another for at least 20 years and neither has any contributor ever been sued for liability, nor was there any court case that concluded that the BSD license is worth anything at all, nor has the developer or commercial acceptance of any product ever been affected by this "untight" license. > [To be integrated with the software in such a way that this license > must be seen before downloading can occur] That's funny... > The foregoing shall be governed by and construed under the laws of > the State of Virginia. The recurring theme throughout this email was that Great Bridge has apparently not appreciated that PostgreSQL land extends beyond the borders of the U.S. of A. Maybe your 32 focus groups in major U.S. cities wanted the license changed like this, but I'll bet lunch that 32 out of 32 focus groups in major European cities will look with extreme suspicion at anything with "laws of the State of XXX" attached to it. Until they realize that the laws of Virginia don't apply to them. Or to Canada, where hub.org is located these days. -- Peter Eisentraut Sernanders väg 10:115 peter_e@gmx.net 75262 Uppsala http://yi.org/peter-e/ Sweden
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