Quoting Marius Amado Alves ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): > BTW, that's a technicality that I believe can be solved. That is, it is > possible to revise the SDC Conditions, or make a new license, that does > not breach clause 6, and still implements the SDC philosophy--which is > NOT "proprietary".
We'll be glad to see that licence, when you finish it. > One way to do it is simply to eliminate the distinction between > commercial and non-commercial, and charge everybody. Would those people then have the right to redistribute? Be sure to check OSD clause #1. The "SDC Conditions v. 2" clause 6 appears to (intentionally) violate that principle, at present -- because your developers specifically wish to _not_ grant that right, but rather reserve it to the copyright holder, requiring each new recipient to likewise purchase a licence: 6. A copy used in a business must have a specific license for that use explicitly issued by SDC. Such a license is called a "commercial license" and is explained in the Commented Conditions. (Your proposed change seems to amount, in essence, to removing the phrase "in a business" from the above, extending the requirement to all users.) The intent of OSD (it seems to me) has always been to describe via a few easily-grasped practical guidelines the underlying core concept of open source -- loosely speaking, access to source code with the perpetual right to freely use, redistribute, or fork the codebase (or create derivative works based on it) for any purpose whatsoever. It honestly seems to me that that's not what you're trying to accomplish. If so, you're not trying to do open source. I should hasten to add: I'm certainly not trying to denigrate what you're aiming for: You might end up with very useful proprietary licence arrangements. I'm just saying you seem to be aiming for something that's clearly not open source. -- license-discuss archive is at http://crynwr.com/cgi-bin/ezmlm-cgi?3