I, too, favor a more robust public domain for software than most acknowledge exists today. Unfortunately, this topic is infused with unclear distinctions, but what is apparent is a difference between what is real and what is ideal. David's position seems to border on idealistic expectations. If one can find "truly public domain" source code, by all means the finder should use it; nothing from OSI would be required.
By definition, public domain source code is not protected by copyright, but open source software is, at least, subject to copyright protection; this distinction is rather significant. We should not equivocate about the distinctions between software controlled by an open source software license and source code "found" in the public domain. Rod [EMAIL PROTECTED] : Quoting David A. Wheeler ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): : : > Actually, I've looked over some of the OSI-approved licenses. : > I'm still not convinced that there's ever a good reason for : > authors of software to use some of those approved licenses either :-). : : The OSI doesn't advocate particular licences: It approves _only_ their : claim to OSD-compliance. : : > I wasn't aware that the OSI ever requires that all OSI : > members "like" the side-effects of the release conditions - as : > long as they meet the spirit & letter of the OSD, they : > should be approved. : : Your rhetoric is overreaching, again: OSI doesn't "require" anything, : other than that people wanting to use its certification mark meet : specified requirements, including usage of an approved licence. : : > I'm not asking the OSI to RECOMMEND releasing software as public : > domain, or to use public domain software. Just a clarification : > that public domain source code (if truly public domain) : > is open source software. : : Feel free to write such a clarification that's markedly less problematic : than the one you attempted before, then -- and don't forget to suggest : somewhere appropriate to post it. (The page of approved licences, which : you have urged, is an obvious non-starter.) : : -- : Cheers, "Teach a man to make fire, and he will be warm : Rick Moen for a day. Set a man on fire, and he will be warm : [EMAIL PROTECTED] for the rest of his life." -- John A. Hrastar : -- : license-discuss archive is at http://crynwr.com/cgi-bin/ezmlm-cgi?3 -- license-discuss archive is at http://crynwr.com/cgi-bin/ezmlm-cgi?3

