McCoy wrote: “FWIW, I still think these sorts of clauses are unnecessary, 
although unnecessary clauses aren’t themselves a violation of the OSD (if they 
were, well, the list would be a lot smaller 😊”

 

I don’t think that §15 of AFL/OSL is “unnecessary.” It clarifies what is 
permitted (“promised by the licensor”) and what is not. That other licenses 
don’t make similar statements of clarification is their issue, not mine.

 

I have moved this response to license-discuss@ at your suggestion.

 

/Larry

 

From: McCoy Smith <[email protected]> 
Sent: Tuesday, June 8, 2021 2:08 PM
To: [email protected]; 'License submissions for OSI review' 
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: [License-review] request for review of the 3D Slicer License

 

I wasn’t talking about your license, Larry, but instead the license currently 
being requested for approval.

IIRC your license was approved quite some time ago, so more appropriate for 
discussion on the license-discuss, not license-review, list. 

FWIW, I still think these sorts of clauses are unnecessary, although 
unnecessary clauses aren’t themselves a violation of the OSD (if they were, 
well, the list would be a lot smaller 😊).

 

From: Lawrence Rosen <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > 
Sent: Tuesday, June 8, 2021 2:04 PM
To: 'McCoy Smith' <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >; 'License 
submissions for OSI review' <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Cc: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
Subject: RE: [License-review] request for review of the 3D Slicer License

 

Thank you, McCoy, for supporting what I said. But it is important to read the 
rest of the sentence in §15. By its promise, the licensor disclaims any 
copyright breach claim if the licensee breaks the law. That is a promise, not a 
condition. It is completely appropriate in a unilateral contract in which only 
the licensor makes such promises.

 

Here is how I describe that legal distinction in the OSL/AFL description 
<http://rosenlaw.com/OSL3.0-explained.htm> :

 

As a legal document, OSL 3.0 is drafted as a unilateral contract in which the 
Licensor makes certain promises and accepts certain obligations. In return, any 
licensee who accepts and uses the software must honor certain conditions. In a 
formal sense, in unilateral contracts licensees don't make promises, they 
merely honor conditions, and so you will find no language in OSL 3.0 to the 
effect that "licensee promises" anything at all. For example, the obligation to 
publish source code is an obligation of the Licensor, not a licensee. [§ 3] 
Reciprocity works indirectly: A licensee's right to distribute Derivative Works 
is conditioned upon licensing those Derivative Works under the same OSL 3.0 
license, whereupon that licensee becomes a Licensor obligated by her own 
promise to publish Source Code. [§§ 1(c), 3]

 

/Larry

 

From: McCoy Smith <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > 
Sent: Tuesday, June 8, 2021 11:55 AM
To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> ; License submissions for 
OSI review <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Subject: Re: [License-review] request for review of the 3D Slicer License

 

The difference being that as an agreement in the license, it is a condition—if 
breached—that can result in termination or a claim of copyright infringement.

But Larry’s right these sort of license requirements are surplusage; breaking 
the law is already, well, illegal.

 

On Jun 8, 2021, at 10:46 AM, Lawrence Rosen <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:



Pam Chestek wrote:

I agree that the sentence "You further agree to use, reproduce, make derivative 
works of, display and distribute the Software in compliance with all applicable 
governmental laws, regulations and orders, including without limitation those 
relating to export and import control" is a field of use restriction that we 
have found unacceptable in the past.

 

I don’t agree with this. A requirement to obey “applicable” laws is mandatory 
for every licensor or licensee who wants to stay out of jail. The government 
will (may!) enforce this provision. Here is AFL 3.0, section 15:

 

15) Right to Use. You may use the Original Work in all ways not otherwise 
restricted or conditioned by this License or by law, and Licensor promises not 
to interfere with or be responsible for such uses by You.

 

/Larry

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: License-review <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > On Behalf Of Pamela 
Chestek
Sent: Monday, June 7, 2021 9:45 PM
To: [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> 
Subject: Re: [License-review] request for review of the 3D Slicer License

 

On 6/1/2021 1:30 AM, Josh Berkus wrote:

> On 5/30/21 2:25 PM, Thorsten Glaser wrote:

>>> If section B was pulled out, I would recommend that this clause 

>>> should not be an agreement but simply inform the user that such 

>>> obligations may exist.

>> Oh, good catch! IIRC we have precedence of not allowing such language 

>> considering laws differ between places and may change, and because it 

>> doesn’t belong into a licence anyway.

> 

> ... also because, given a lot of the crazy laws out there, it may be 

> impossible to be in compliance with all such laws.

> 

I agree that the sentence "You further agree to use, reproduce, make derivative 
works of, display and distribute the Software in compliance with all applicable 
governmental laws, regulations and orders, including without limitation those 
relating to export and import control" is a field of use restriction that we 
have found unacceptable in the past.

 

Pam

 

Pamela S. Chestek

Chestek Legal

PO Box 2492

Raleigh, NC 27602

 <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

+1 919-800-8033

 

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