> On 24 Mar 2017, at 13:14, Otto Moerbeek <o...@drijf.net> wrote:
> 
> On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 11:53:10AM +0000, Blumenthal, Uri - 0553 - MITLL 
> wrote:
> 
>> I personally think this issue is being blown way out of proportion and 
>> beyond the boundary of reason. 
>> 
>> Regards,
>> Uri
> 
> Is it reasonable to step on the rights of authors with the backing of
> large corporations?

I personally do not see this as something led, backed or driven by the large 
corporation. 

Rather, I see a community of developers, do a very reasonable, timely and 
sensible job to get their house in order; adapt to the realities of modern 
society - and thus allow the community to continue to operate as it wants in a 
changed world.

We understand a lot more about IPR, CLAs, patens and (software) licenses (their 
interaction with business and governance processes) than we did 30 years ago.

And just like we consider retiring support for say a PDP-11, AIX or SunOS & old 
compiler cruft — so do our licenses need maintenance.

>  Individual authors that might have chosen to
> change email address or are unable to be contacted for other reasons?

And as all things in life - this is not a black or white thing - but one where 
you need to trade one type of risk versus that of another. 

Long term health of the community is important; as are old contributions made 
once to that community. But to an outsider or reasonably observer - neither is 
done without context or absolute. Total stagnation is as much a risk as blindly 
pushing through a change unilaterally.

To me it seems that OpenSSL is doing a commendable job trying to find a 
balance. 

And ultimately a large part of the metric of success is wether this community 
survives; and continues to see the amplification loop of having its code use 
and thus garnering resources to keep the code usable work. Like bitrot - 
outdated & outmoded licenses too are an impediment too for this.  Also - know 
that outsiders who have to access the risks of these license changes won’t see 
this as a black and white thing - and are perfectly used to trade the 
advantages of a known license with the residuals of less than perfect 
provenance. We do that all the time.

With kind regards,

Dw.

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