On Jun 20, 2007, at 5:35 PM, Randy Gordon wrote:
I started writing a JackRabbit Eclipse plugin, and decided to
include the JSR-170 javadocs.
As I read the license for the JSR-170 specification on http://
www.day.com/maven/jsr170/licenses/day-spec-license.htm.
it seems pretty clear you cannot, under any conditions, use any
product implementing a JSR-170 implementation for other than
evaluation uses.
Umm, is this correct?
No. Read clause 2.
It really kinda limits the use of Jackrabbit, since it falls under
the license as a JSR-170 implementation and, well, I don't mind
doing a plugin for the Open Source community, but I draw the line
at donating it to a commercial company.
Jackrabbit is under the Apache License.
As near as I can tell (I am no lawyer) it is viral, it also claims
rights to any product that merely uses the JSR-170 specification
No, it is not "viral" in any sense, and cannot claim rights on other
people's software. What on earth are you reading? It is the most
liberal of the standard spec licenses allowed by the JSPA. All JSRs
are implemented under those terms (at best) or far more restrictive
terms.
However, I did a BI application for a patent search company a
while back, and, learned a little bit about patent squatting.
While this license COULD be interpreted to apply only to the
specification itself, the courts tend to take a narrower view.
Finally, I am at a loss as to why why this license is even
necessary for a specification that is intended for use by other
commercial companies.
The JSPA requires it for compatibility restrictions. Talk to Sun.
The relevant passages are below:
1. License for Purposes of Evaluation and Developing Applications.
Licensor hereby grants you a fully-paid, non-exclusive, non-
transferable, worldwide, limited license (without the right to
sublicense), under Licensor's applicable intellectual property
rights to view, download, use and reproduce the Specification only
for the purpose of internal evaluation. This includes developing
applications intended to run on an implementation of the
Specification provided that such applications do not themselves
implement any portion(s) of the Specification.
No, that's only the first clause. Try reading the other clauses.
In any case, that license only applies to the JCR jar file and
javadocs (the specification) distributed by Day. Apache Jackrabbit
is separate and completely under the Apache License.
....Roy