Can OSI specify that public domain is open source?
John Cowan
cowan at mercury.ccil.org
Wed Sep 7 19:58:27 UTC 2011
Tom Callaway scripsit:
> Works of the United States Government for which copyright is
> unavailable under 17 U.S.C. 105. are considered to be in the Public
> Domain in the United States. Even though such works are not
> technically open source, in the United States this means that
> there are no restrictions on those works. This may not be true in
> non-US jurisdictions. Public Domain is an extremely complicated and
> tricky concept, and the OSI does not endorse abandoning your
> copyrights to place a work into the Public Domain whenever it is
> avoidable. If you wish to license your work with an extremely
> permissive "do anything you wish" license that is roughly equivalent
> to a Public Domain work, consider using the Creative Commons 0
> License, if possible.
+1
--
John Cowan cowan at ccil.org http://www.ccil.org/~cowan
Statistics don't help a great deal in making important decisions.
Most people have more than the average number of feet, but I'm not about
to start a company selling shoes in threes. --Ross Gardler
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