On Jun 10, 12:04 pm, David Recordon <
record...@gmail.com> wrote:
> For OpenID we've spent time working with a large group of community
> members -- both big and small -- to develop an IPR policy and process
> for OpenID specifications. These are designed to ensure that
> contributors do not have any hidden patents over finalized
> specifications. Y
David-
I get that.
What I'm trying to point out is that there is no consumer licensing
*at all* on the OpenID spec.
There is the non-assertion agreement , which covers contributers and
the foundation. There is licensing on the libraries. There seems to
be no licensing on the spec anywhere.
It seems like every single edge/case scenario was created to ensure
that open licensing could occur -- but there hasn't actually been any
licensing on the specification. The IPR policy talks about 'royalty-
free nature of Specifications' (II 1 a ) and in V1 there is
"""
1. Copyright License. Some Contributions may not be subject to
copyright. To the extent,
however, that a Contribution is or may be subject to copyright, the
Contributor hereby grants a
perpetual, irrevocable (except in case of breach of this license), non-
exclusive, royalty-free,
worldwide license in such copyright to the OpenID Foundation, to other
Contributors, and to
Implementers, to reproduce, prepare derivative works from, distribute,
perform, and display the
Contribution and derivative works thereof solely for purposes of
developing draft Specifications
and implementing Implementers Drafts and Final Specifications.
"""
However none of the specifications actually have licensing that
suggests that.
I could be wrong on this -- Gabriel showed me an offsite licensing
earlier on the oAuth specification. However, to the best of my
knowledge, there exists no actual end-user / Implementor licensing on
the specifications themselves.
It seems like you all meant to do a CC / MIT license, but never
actually did it.