Thanks for finding this, MJ. On Wed, 2007-09-26 at 13:03 +0100, MJ Ray wrote: > One problem caused by Europe for free software is database licensing, > which isn't quite the same as copyright over databases. Someone has > published a first draft of an open data licence to try to cover this. > Is this useful for free software or not?
Personally, I think it absolutely is: there are many examples of databases which make free software useful, from dictionaries to speech synthesis audio libraries, and the fact that they don't have database licenses at the moment somewhat casts a shadow over them. > I'm slightly concerned about the triple-whammy of database licensing, > copyright licensing and a contract. I think copyright + database right is pretty much essential because of the differing jurisdictions: many places you can't copyright databases, some places you can, and some places you get a copyright-like database right. The contractual aspect also seems unavoidable: see, e.g., the section on moral rights: "If waiver is not possible, Licensor agrees not to assert any moral rights mentioned above over the Database". Agreement between parties means "contract" pretty much. Maybe it's possible to phrase that kind of thing as "Licensor offers a non-exclusive and irrevocable promise not to assert any moral rights .." type thing, but frankly I'd be much more comfortable with a contract :) > I'm very happy to see the confusing CC-style anti-TPM wording made > irrelevant by permitting parallel distribution. Yeah. I'm also very happy to see an LGPL-style copyleft; I don't see how a full copyleft can work properly in the database rights arena without preventing people from doing useful stuff with databases. > There's also an Open Data Factual Info Licence which puzzles me a bit > because *information* is not covered by copyright, only the expression > (the licence also seems to state this in point 2.4), so it seems a bit > unnecessary. I think the idea is that the factual info license covers the database as a whole, contents and all. The ODL itself seeks to only cover the database rights: the collection of contents and the ordering/indexes/etc. As an example, if you had a database of books which contained the texts of the books themselves, if those books were in copyright you'd have to use the ODL because you can't license the copyright of the books. If they were Gutenberg books, you could use the ODFIL because you can license the job lot. (Ignoring the obvious issue in the first case where you probably don't have the rights to redistribute the database anyway ;) That's my understanding/reading of it, anyway. Cheers, Alex. _______________________________________________ Discussion mailing list [email protected] https://mail.fsfeurope.org/mailman/listinfo/discussion
