[License-review] License Committee Report - for board meeting of 2013-11-06 [NASA, EUPL, and Tidepool]
Richard Fontana
fontana at sharpeleven.org
Thu Jun 26 02:20:59 UTC 2014
Regarding the submittted NASA Open Source Agreement 2.0
http://projects.opensource.org/pipermail/license-review/attachments/20130607/0d342a59/attachment-0001.txt
NOSA 2.0 section 3F says:
F. You may not make any representation in the Subject Software or in
any promotional, advertising or other material that may be construed
as an endorsement by Government Agency or by any other Contributor or
recipient of any product or service provided by You, or that may seek
to obtain commercial advantage of Government Agency's or any other
recipient’s participation in this Agreement
I wrote on 31 October 2013:
> 3F: What if non-NASA Contributor A or non-NASA recipient B, allow me
> to say that they endorse a product or service provided by me: am I
> violating NASA's license? As drafted this seems to be possible under
> 3F, yet it would be an absurd and unfair result.
Bryan Geurts writes:
> Paragraph 3F is a requirement imposed by NASA's charter Statute, the
> Space Act, where it states: "No person . . . may knowingly use the
> words "National Aeronautics and Space Administration" or the letters
> "NASA", or any combination, variation, or colorable imitation of
> those words or letters either alone or in combination with other
> words or letters . . . in connection with any product or service
> being offered or made available to the public in a manner reasonably
> calculated to convey the impression that the product or service has
> the authorization, support, sponsorship, or endorsement of, or the
> development, use, or manufacture by or on behalf of the
> Administration which does not, in fact, exist." See 51 USC
> §20141(a).
Right. But I don't see where in that provision it says that NASA is
required or expected to enforce it in contracts or licenses authored by
NASA -- to which NASA might not even be a party, perhaps not involving
entities or acts within the US. Also subsection (b) already creates a
public remedy to police conduct that violates (a).
> Other federal agencies have a similar restriction in
> their charter statutes. This same restriction is found in NOSA 1.3,
> Paragraph 3E. Since the NOSA is designed to govern software created
> by an agency with such a restriction against endorsement, such a
> prohibition is required.
Required by what? 51 USC 20141(a) doesn't say "all agreements that NASA
might play some role in drafting must be sure to contain a contractual
prohibition against the conduct that is prohibited in this
provision" (which NASA might not even be able to enforce). It can't
mean that all licenses to which NASA is a party must contain such a
prohibition.
51 USC 20141(a) appears to be a prohibition against acts by persons
other than NASA, not a prohibition against action or non-action by NASA.
> If you or any other non-government agency
> entity wishes to endorse a product or service not related to a
> government agency, you are free to do so. I don't see how this
> restriction could be construed or interpreted any differently.
Because it isn't limited to "Government Agency". It says "by Government
Agency or by any other Contributor" and "... commercial advantage of
Government Agency's or any other recipient’s participation".
- Richard
More information about the License-review
mailing list