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<p class="MsoPlainText" style="margin-left:.5in"><a name="_MailEndCompose">>Cem Karan wrote:<o:p></o:p></a></p>
<p class="MsoPlainText" style="margin-left:.5in"><span style="mso-bookmark:_MailEndCompose">>> The only reason that the ARL OSL was proposed AT ALL is because there is a strong concern that since USG code doesn't have copyright [1], any license that relies
exclusively on copyright may be invalidated by the courts [2].<o:p></o:p></span></p>
<p class="MsoPlainText"><span style="mso-bookmark:_MailEndCompose"><o:p> </o:p></span></p>
<p class="MsoPlainText"><span style="mso-bookmark:_MailEndCompose">>We understand that strong concern. Most of us don't share it.<o:p></o:p></span></p>
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<div>Well, if all lawyers agreed then IP cases would go a lot more quickly, no? </div>
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<div>Plaintiff’s lawyer: We think X! </div>
<div>Defendant’s lawyer: We agree!</div>
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<div>I don’t believe that there is an OSD requirement that the lawyers on License-Review/License-Discuss agree that the legal concern being addressed by a new license submission is valid. Especially when other lawyers disagree.</div>
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<div>Given that NOSA is still in limbo, it might be fair (not really given how long NOSA has been in limbo) to ask that ARL and NASA lawyers get together and address their concerns in one special purpose license since both are trying to address legal concerns
they believe are valid for USG OSS projects. Although, with the current white house interest, both NASA and ARL could punt the issue up to the Tony Scott at the OMB (or whomever Chris suggested) and say “here are our requirements…give us a FedGov OSS license
that address those needs and submit it to the OSI".</div>
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<div>And then approve (or deny) that license quickly once submitted If it passes the OSD and retire the existing NOSA license rather than sit on it for three years without resolution. Hopefully, if the White House submits a license to the OSI it is reviewed
with a bit more alacrity.</div>
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