Indeed, if there’s no copyright in the US, there may be no need of a copyright 
license from the government here, but in any event there *is* an OSI approved 
permissive license that licenses both any applicable copyright rights (without 
actually requiring that the government have any) and patent rights applicable 
to the project - the UPL.  

If the government releases code under the UPL, and accepts contributions under 
the UPL, they are using an OSI approved license, full stop, no need of extra 
terms or to treat other contributors any differently than the government 
itself, no need of an express public domain dedication which is any different 
than what is already true by law, everyone is simply licensing whatever 
copyright rights they possess as well as whatever patent rights they possess 
covering the project as they contributed to or provided it, and it seems to me 
at first glance like nothing else need be done…?

 Regards,
  Jim


> On Mar 1, 2017, at 6:49 AM, Richard Fontana <font...@sharpeleven.org> wrote:
> 
> On Wed, Mar 01, 2017 at 09:37:13AM -0500, Richard Fontana wrote:
>> Strictly speaking, the use of
>> CC0 assumes that you have copyright ownership. 
> 
> I guess that's a bit of an overstatement, but still given the nature
> of the angst I've heard from US government people over the years
> concerning the use of nominal copyright licenses, I'd find it
> surprising if CC0 was treated differently.
> 
> 
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