All, I want to keep this alive as I haven't seen a conclusion yet.  Earlier I 
asked if OSI would accept the US Government (USG) putting its non-copyrighted 
works out under CC0 as Open Source **provided** that the USG accepts and 
redistributes copyrighted contributions under an OSI-approved license.  Is 
this acceptable to OSI?  Should I move this discussion to the license-review 
list?

To recap:

1) This would only cover USG works that do not have copyright.  Works that 
have copyright would be eligible to use copyright-based licenses, and to be 
OSI-approved as Open Source would need to use an OSI-approved license.

2) The USG work/project would select an OSI-approved license that it accepted 
contributions under.  The USG would redistribute the contributions under that 
license, but the portions of the work that are not under copyright would be 
redistributed under CC0.  That means that for some projects (ones that have no 
copyrighted material at all initially), the only license that the works would 
have would be CC0.

I can't speak to patents or other IP rights that the USG has, I can only 
comment on what the Army Research Laboratory (ARL) has done 
(https://github.com/USArmyResearchLab/ARL-Open-Source-Guidance-and-Instructions),
 
which includes a step to affirmatively waive any patent rights that ARL might 
have in the project before distributing it.  I am hoping that other agencies 
will do something similar, but have no power or authority to say that they 
will.

Given all this, is it time to move this to license-review, or otherwise get a 
vote?  I'd like this solved ASAP.

Thanks,
Cem Karan

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