Michel Roche <[email protected]> writes: > […] the fact is that the organization has spent time and efforts (even > some [public] money) to produce the data.
So, the public has already paid for it. The public should never again have a barrier to access that data, since they own it now. > Yes, but that's where the main fear resides. Suppose that the owner of > very good base maps publishes a direct competitor to the guide. Excellent! This is what government's role is, to facilitate the society to build on its work. The situation you describe would be something to stand aside and allow to happen, not to put artificial restrictions onto. The work of publicly-funded government-commissioned work should, in general, be released to the same public under license terms that fully respect the software freedom of all recipients. Some cases may have special reasons that justify restricting that freedom. This case does not sound like one deserving of such restrictions. -- \ “The cost of education is trivial compared to the cost of | `\ ignorance.” —Thomas Jefferson | _o__) | Ben Finney _______________________________________________ Discussion mailing list [email protected] https://mail.fsfeurope.org/mailman/listinfo/discussion
