On Mon, Nov 30, 2009 at 11:17 AM, Erick Michau <
erick....@gmail.com> wrote:
> This is more seducing than the Ms-PL (even though I never read the Ms-PL and
> never will - I'm sure I'm not the only one with the cliché). (as a side note
> maybe is it not so futile to acknowledge the cliché surrounding the Ms-PL
> and its not-so-reviewed aspect).
> As an idea (I have no knowledge of its application):
> how hard would it be to craft your own license based on GPLv3 or Ms-PL or
> whatever?
> as in fedoraproject
>
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement12 or
> opensuse
http://en.opensuse.org/OpenSUSE_License
I think it would be possible to craft my own license. Ms-PL is under a
Creative Commons license so it can be "forked".
Right now I would only see a benefit in forking Ms-PL if I were
planning to use it, just to give it a different name.
> Note how they all start on the first paragraph by:
> "this collective work pursuant to the GNU General Public License version 2"
> and then they state/add their own uniqueness.
In a sense, that is what I am doing by allowing future licenses --
without polluting the original licenses. Maybe I could augment my
clause to allow future terms to be inserted by Funtoo in the future,
to the main copyright clause? But I don't think this is legally
necessary -- in the future, if I wanted to add additional terms, I
could simply add them at that time to the main copyright clause -- the
earlier versions would still be available without any of those terms.
> For me it means you can license funtoo GPLv3 and add a whole set of (smartly
> selected) additions in the freedom you give through the license.
I am open to ideas here but right now don't have any ideas on how to
add smartly-selected additions to increase the freedom of the license
:) Say in 15 years, maybe I would want to release my old projects
under a BSD license too, because I just want to allow people to easily
grab pieces of my code for other projects. I can do this with the
approach I am proposing.
> And be sure to add a clause where when a funtoo software is not licensed by
> default it will be licensed to the Funtoo license (may sound strange but
> it's one of those legal tricks).
If you have any good links discussing this, please send my way. I am
not sure if I will need this since I think all my software has a
pretty clearly defined license when I release it.
> I just threw quick thoughts, I may be totally wrong (correct my
> misunderstandings if you have the time/will).
I do appreciate the feedback :)
> Keep in mind that whatever license you choose it won't drive us away from
> funtoo but might for futur funtooist.
Yes, I think it's good to keep future users in mind.
Something like this may be good for a larger project - Gentoo also has
a social contract which was based on Debian's. If I have more Funtoo
developers, I think the key thing then is to have a "Funtoo Developer
Contract" of how they should interact with the community. The other
stuff in the social contract does not really impact things.
> Thanks a lot for your time and work and take your time to find the most
> suited license.
You're welcome.
> my 2 cent feedback
Worth more than 2 cents in my opinion. Sorry for the delay in replying.
-Daniel