I'm moving this to ie...@ieft.org. There are important policy implications here that the entire community should understand before we let the IPR WG decide for us on a policy so opposite to open source and open standards!
I am also copying this separately to the Open Web Foundation (OWF) list, which I believe may have some interest in ensuring that it can copy and modify IETF specifications for its own standards any time it damn well pleases.
/Larry
> > At 11:18 AM -0700 9/17/08, Lawrence Rosen wrote:
> >> Suppose you were to specifically ask whether IETF wants to prevent
> other
> >> SDOs from re-publishing (modified) IETF text within their own specs? Do
> you
> >> expect that the community here really wants to limit the use of IETF
> specs
> >> in that way?
>
> Yes, undoubtedly that was the WG consensus. We don't want to see other
> SDOs
> publishing incompatible versions of our protocols, period. And this is
> not paranoia; it's evidence-based, although I don't want to point the
> finger
> at specific SDOs, since such matters are usually handled by courteous
> bilateral discussions. Using copyright protection is clearly a last
> resort.
>
> >> Why on earth would a volunteer, cooperative standards
> >> organization like IETF want to do that to other volunteer, cooperative
> SDOs?
>
> Becaus our primary mission is to make the Internet work better, which
> requires interoperable protocols, which precludes incompatible versions.
>
> Brian
*********************
Please note: There is an earlier set of emails on this thread in the archives of the IPR WG.
/Larry
*********************
> -----Original Message-----
> From: ipr-wg-...@ietf.org [mailto:ipr-wg-...@ietf.org] On Behalf
> Of Brian E Carpenter
> Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2008 2:15 PM
> To: ipr...@ietf.org
> Subject: Re: FW: IETF copying conditions
I'm moving this to ie...@ieft.org. There are important policy implications here that the entire community should understand before we let the IPR WG decide for us on a policy so opposite to open source and open standards!
I am also copying this separately to the Open Web Foundation (OWF) list, which I believe may have some interest in ensuring that it can copy and modify IETF specifications for its own standards any time it damn well pleases.
Please note that CC is not DFSG-safe. We used CC at the XMPP Standards
Foundation and discovered this inadvertently. Therefore we changed our
IPR policy to be MIT license (very slightly modified).
Peter
In contrast to the CC-SA 2.0 license, version 3.0 is considered to be compatible to the DFSG.
Before you draw any conclusions, I suggest that you post to the
debian-legal list about it.
/psa
Who is going to pay for the filing and maintenance of the trademark?
Our mark can be used anywhere without paying a penny and without asking permission.
In the U.S., it costs nothing to place the letters "TM" next to our mark. That's a good start to protect us here, or to protect us against foreign evil-doers who want to do business here. Federal registration of a trademark is about $300 in the U.S.
Maybe our Paris Convention colleagues can raise money for protection "over there"? :-)
/Larry
Somebody claiming to be Gabe Wachob wrote:
> I agree with the pro-derivative works leaning.
>
> The right way to address confusion about specs being "standards" or
> even "agreed upon" is through trademark (or Chris Messina's concept of
> a "community mark").
>
> For example, the OWF could insist that the phrase "OWF-Approved
> Specification" only be used in conjunction with specs developed and
> agreed to in accordance to whatever minimal IPR and process
> requirements the OWF comes up with. The power to enforce this should/
> would be based in trademark law, not copyright.
It doesn't seem like something that the law should be brought into at
all... if someone wants to pretend they're OWF when they're not, let
them, let the community decry them and then they lose. No money, no
lawyers.
- --
Stephen Paul Weber, @singpolyma
Please see <http://singpolyma.net> for how I prefer to be contacted.
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Its an open question whether that is sufficient for OWF, I believe.
-Gabe
What Stephan has outlined here matches with my experience which is my Liberty Alliance has registered (and is prepared to defend) its trademarks in many, many countries (at non-trivial expense).But if OWF Board members don't want to see much money flow through the organization (money is the root of all evil, don't you know) then perhaps this is an opportunity for OWF and IDTBD to collaborate/partner. I'm pretty sure IDTBD will have a trademark program and there must be some efficiencies of scale associated with doing this kind of work in aggregate... especially if OWF Board members don't want to do this themselves but would like to see these marks registered internationally and defended.So, perhaps too early to bring this up now, but in case you are planning your trademark/logo/branding strategy now, here's a data point/option to consider.