OSD #7 has something to say about an "additional license" being needed for 
software:

 

7. Distribution of License

The rights attached to the program must apply to all to whom the program is 
redistributed without the need for execution of an additional license by those 
parties.

 

I assumed "the rights" referred to here are only "copyright rights." Before OSI 
approved a license in the old days, some government agencies and universities 
complained because they had other, more complicated, patent rights to 
distribute that might require or engage "additional" non-copyright licenses. At 
that time, nobody insisted that an open source license also include patent 
rights.  

 

We never fully thought that through, which is why we are still talking about 
this problem for government and university software years later!

 

As a customer, I personally would prefer an explicit patent license within my 
open source copyright license. I like Apache's patent provision for that 
reason. I would like governments and universities to patent things only on the 
assumption that both copyright and patent rights will explicitly be licensed 
under a single OSI-approved license so that the software can be useful as well 
as open.

 

Am I reading this OSD #7 correctly? Would the dear departed Antonin Scalia have 
considered this the "original intent" of the authors of that one-sentence OSD 
#7 provision?

 

/Larry

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: License-discuss [mailto:license-discuss-boun...@opensource.org] On Behalf 
Of Tzeng, Nigel H.
Sent: Tuesday, December 6, 2016 1:01 PM
To: henrik.i...@avoinelama.fi
Cc: license-discuss@opensource.org
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] Views on React licensing?

 

On 12/6/16, 3:33 PM, " 
<mailto:henrik.i...@gmail.com%20on%20behalf%20of%20Henrik%20Ingo> 
henrik.i...@gmail.com on behalf of Henrik Ingo"

< <mailto:henrik.i...@gmail.com%20on%20behalf%20of%20henrik.i...@avoinelama.fi> 
henrik.i...@gmail.com on behalf of henrik.i...@avoinelama.fi> wrote:

 

 

>The question isn't about patents or copyrights. The point is that 

>taking an OSI approved license and making additions to it by adding a 

>separate file with additional terms and conditions, results in a 

>combination which as a whole is not OSI approved open source license. 

>It is no different from taking the BSD license and making additions to 

>it within the same file.

 

In what way is the BSD copyright license impacted by an external patent grant 
license?

 

How is this different than combining a BSD copyright license and an external 
trademark license agreement?

 

IMHO it has everything to do with whether patents are in or out of scope for 
OSI license approval for copyright licenses.

 

>I categorize patent grants with wide reaching termination clauses as 

>commons-friendly. Like I said, my only regret is that there aren¹t 

>licenses being used that would be even more wide reaching than this one.

 

That¹s fine as long as there are open source licenses with far more narrow 
grants or no grants whatsoever like CC0.

 

CC0->ECL v2->Apache->React should all be fine from a OSI license 

CC0->approval

perspective.

 

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