Certainly the approach code.mil spells out to contributions seems ok without 
having to address the license issue at all, but these questions seem orthogonal 
to me.  Cem seems to be trying to ensure that all open source projects 
operating using this process are under an OSI approved license, which appears 
to require them to pick one (or several) FOSS licenses to actually apply.  CC0 
doesn’t work for that purpose because it’s not OSI approved anyway and also 
doesn’t have a patent license, but observing this doesn’t solve Cem’s problem 
of how to license this stuff in a way that *is* OSI approved, which I think is 
what he’s getting at.  (Feel free to correct me…)


> On Mar 1, 2017, at 8:29 AM, Richard Fontana <font...@sharpeleven.org> wrote:
> 
> Well the complication is mainly a response to Cem wanting the OSI to
> bless his proposed approach. I think however that code.mil has already
> rejected this sort of idea.
> 
> I think the code.mil approach is much more elegant without introducing
> the use of CC0. 
> 
> 

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