Re: [bitcoin-dev] BIP 2 revival and rework

2016-10-16 Thread Tom Zander via bitcoin-dev
On Saturday, 15 October 2016 17:02:30 CEST Marco Falke wrote:
> >> BIP 2 does not forbid you to release your work under PD in
> >> legislations where this is possible
> > 
> > It does, actually.
> 
> Huh, I can't find it in the text I read. The text mentions "not
> acceptable", but I don't read that as "forbidden".

You suggest that a person can dual license something under both CC-BY-SA as 
well as under public domain.
That means you don't understand copyright,

See, all licenses are based on you having copyright. In contrast; public 
domain is not a license, it means a certain text does not have copyright. 
Public domain is the lack of copyright.

One text can not at the same time have copyright and not have copyright, 
making your assumption impossible.

Hence, with PD not explicitly being allowed, you can't use PD.

Personally I prefer copyleft licenses, so the lack of PD is fine with me. The 
lack of a good copyleft we can use in BIPs is what got me involved in this 
discussion in the first place.
-- 
Tom Zander
Blog: https://zander.github.io
Vlog: https://vimeo.com/channels/tomscryptochannel
___
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev


Re: [bitcoin-dev] BIP 2 revival and rework

2016-10-15 Thread Marco Falke via bitcoin-dev
On Sat, Oct 15, 2016 at 4:21 PM, Tom Zander via bitcoin-dev
 wrote:
>> > My suggestion (sorry for not explaining it better) was that for BIPS to
>> > be a public domain (aka CC0) and a CC-BY option and nothing else.
>>
>> Indeed, we agree that BIPs should be licensed as permissive as
>> possible. Still, I wonder why you chose otherwise with BIP 134.
>> (Currently OPL and CC-BY-SA)
>
> OPL was the only allowed option apart from CC0.

I think you are misunderstanding what is allowed and what is required...

BIP1: "Each BIP must either be explicitly labelled as placed in the
public domain (see this BIP as an example) or licensed under the Open
Publication License"

So BIP1 *requires* PD or OPL but does not forbid other licenses. For
example, you are free to multi license OPL (and additionally: BSD,
MIT, CC0, ...)

BIP2: "Each new BIP must identify at least one acceptable license in
its preamble."

So BIP2 *requires* an acceptable license but does not forbid other
choices. For example, you are free to choose: BSD (and additionally:
PD, CC-BY-SA, WTFPL, BEER, ...)


>> BIP 2 does not forbid you to release your work under PD in
>> legislations where this is possible
>
> It does, actually.

Huh, I can't find it in the text I read. The text mentions "not
acceptable", but I don't read that as "forbidden".

>
>> One
>> of the goals of BIP 2 is to no longer allow PD as the only copyright
>> option.
>
> That's odd as PD was never the only copyright option.

Right. Though, up to now the majority of the BIP authors chose PD as
the only option.

Marco
___
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev


Re: [bitcoin-dev] BIP 2 revival and rework

2016-10-15 Thread Tom Zander via bitcoin-dev
On Saturday, 15 October 2016 14:12:09 CEST Marco Falke wrote:
> On Sat, Oct 15, 2016 at 1:00 PM, Tom Zander via bitcoin-dev
> 
>  wrote:
> > My suggestion (sorry for not explaining it better) was that for BIPS to
> > be a public domain (aka CC0) and a CC-BY option and nothing else.
> 
> Indeed, we agree that BIPs should be licensed as permissive as
> possible. Still, I wonder why you chose otherwise with BIP 134.
> (Currently OPL and CC-BY-SA)

OPL was the only allowed option apart from CC0.

I dual licensed it so future acceptance of the CC-BY-SA one may mean someone 
can just remove the OPL from the BIP and no futher action or permission is 
needed from all the authors.

> BIP 2 does not forbid you to release your work under PD in
> legislations where this is possible

It does, actually.

> One
> of the goals of BIP 2 is to no longer allow PD as the only copyright
> option.

That's odd as PD was never the only copyright option.

-- 
Tom Zander
Blog: https://zander.github.io
Vlog: https://vimeo.com/channels/tomscryptochannel
___
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev


Re: [bitcoin-dev] BIP 2 revival and rework

2016-10-15 Thread Tom Zander via bitcoin-dev
On Saturday, 15 October 2016 12:11:02 CEST Marco Falke wrote:
> On Sat, Sep 24, 2016 at 11:41 AM, Tom via bitcoin-dev
>  wrote:
> > I'd suggest saying that "Share alike" is required and "Attribution" is
> > optional.
> 
> Please note there is no CC license that requires SA and at the same
> time has BY as an option.
> 
> Generally, I think CC0 is best suited as license for BIPs. If authors
> are scared that they won't get proper attribution, they can choose
> MIT/BSD or CC-BY.

My suggestion (sorry for not explaining it better) was that for BIPS to be a 
public domain (aka CC0) and a CC-BY option and nothing else.

I like you agree with that part, but I see you added two licenses.
Do you have a good reason to add MIT/BSD to that list? Otherwise I think we 
agree.
Using code-specific licenses (including the GPL) for documentation and 
specifically a specification is a really poor fit and doens't make much sense.

> Other than that I don't think that more restrictive
> licenses are suitable for BIPs. The BIP repo seems like the wrong
> place to promote Open Access (e.g. by choosing a CC-BY-SA license).
> BIP 2 allows such licenses, but does not recommend them, which is
> fine.
> 
> I think that BIP 2 in its current form (
> https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0002.mediawiki
> @6e47447b ) 
Well, it has this sentence;

> This BIP is dual-licensed under the Open Publication License and
> BSD 2-clause license. 

Which is a bit odd in light of the initial email from Luke that suggested we 
drop the Open Publication License and we use the CC ones instead in addition 
to the public domain one.

Marco:
> looks good and addressed the feedback which was
> accumulated last year. If there are no objections I'd suggest to move
> forward with BIP 2 in the next couple of days/weeks.

Thats odd, you just stated you like the public domain (aka CC0) license, yet 
you encourage the BIP2 that states we can no longer use public domain for 
BIPs... Did you read it?
It says;
 «Public domain is not universally recognised as a legitimate action, thus
  it is inadvisable.» [1]


Also;
This list has not seen a lot of traffic, if you want to make sure people keep 
using the BIP process, I think you need to reach out to the rest of the 
community and make sure this has been heard and discussed.
Moving forward the way it is now will likely deminish the importance of the 
BIP process.

I strongly suggest people make very clear any and all changes that are 
proposed and defend each of them with reasons why you want to change things.


1) if you write as a rationale "In some jurisdictions, public domain is not 
recognised as a legitimate legal action" then you can at least name those 
jurisdictions and explain how they *do* support things like GPL. Burden of 
proof is on the man who wants to change things.
It looks fishy when lawyers disagree. See the CC wikipedia page;
 "public domain: cc0 Freeing content globally without restrictions"

-- 
Tom Zander
Blog: https://zander.github.io
Vlog: https://vimeo.com/channels/tomscryptochannel
___
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev


Re: [bitcoin-dev] BIP 2 revival and rework

2016-10-15 Thread Marco Falke via bitcoin-dev
On Sat, Sep 24, 2016 at 11:41 AM, Tom via bitcoin-dev
 wrote:
> I'd suggest saying that "Share alike" is required and "Attribution" is
> optional.

Please note there is no CC license that requires SA and at the same
time has BY as an option.

Generally, I think CC0 is best suited as license for BIPs. If authors
are scared that they won't get proper attribution, they can choose
MIT/BSD or CC-BY. Other than that I don't think that more restrictive
licenses are suitable for BIPs. The BIP repo seems like the wrong
place to promote Open Access (e.g. by choosing a CC-BY-SA license).
BIP 2 allows such licenses, but does not recommend them, which is
fine.

I think that BIP 2 in its current form (
https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0002.mediawiki
@6e47447b ) looks good and addressed the feedback which was
accumulated last year. If there are no objections I'd suggest to move
forward with BIP 2 in the next couple of days/weeks.

Marco
___
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev


Re: [bitcoin-dev] BIP 2 revival and rework

2016-09-24 Thread Tom via bitcoin-dev
On Saturday, 24 September 2016 06:36:00 CEST Luke Dashjr via bitcoin-dev 
wrote:
> * OPL will no longer be an acceptable license. Many in the community feel
> that prohibiting publication is unacceptable for BIPs, and I haven't
> heard any arguments in favour of allowing it.

My suggestion would be that we replace OPL as an allowed license with one 
or two Creative Commons licenses. Following the suggestion from the OPL 
creators themselves.
According to Wikipedia;

> Open Publication License was created by the Open Content Project in 1999 
> as public copyright license for documents. The license was superseded
> in 2003/2007 by the Creative commons licenses.

I'd suggest saying that "Share alike" is required and "Attribution" is 
optional.

Executive summary; give the user the choice (next to public domain) between 
CCO and BY-SA
see;
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Creative_Commons_license#Seven_regularly_used_licenses
___
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev