On Tue, Jul 04, 2006 at 12:44:35AM +0100, MJ Ray wrote: > > 12.1 Termination. This License and the rights granted hereunder > > will terminate: > > [...] > > (c) automatically without notice if You, at any time during the > > term of this License, commence an action for patent infringement > > (including as a cross claim or counterclaim) against Sybase or > > any Contributor. > > This copyright licence attempts to enforce all Sybase's and > Contributors' patents, whether applicable or not. All patents. > Not just software ones.
Hmm, it doesn't appear to say even a word about _Sybase's_ patents at all. It speaks about "Your" (ie, the user/distributor's) patents. So, let's say an organization/company which owns one of Debian's mirrors, a mirror which carries non-free like most mirrors do, owns a patent. Not a software patent -- a patent for a mousetrap or a drug. Now, let's say that EvilCorp wants to do some patent trolling. They buy out any of openwatcom's contributors -- it's a big patent with hundreds or thousands of contributors, many of them corporate. In fact, often you can't tell who owns CorpA without a longer research; it can be owned by CorpB and then by CorpC and finally by EvilCorp. Now, EvilCorp starts a litigation against the university/company which provides our mirror. The defender for all practical reasons just lost all his patents. Sure, software patents are evil, but we're talking about patents of _any_ kind here. And even though non-software patents are often controversial as well, Debian can't make dropping any patents owned by one of mirror operators as simple as buying out a legal entity which by a long chain of ownership owns the copyright to a 10-line patch buried deep inside openwatcom. The license isn't good enough even for non-free, I would say. -- 1KB // Microsoft corollary to Hanlon's razor: // Never attribute to stupidity what can be // adequately explained by malice. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]