[License-review] Approval: OIN License (Open Innovation License)

Andrew Nassief kamalandrew55 at gmail.com
Sun Dec 27 18:10:06 UTC 2020


Hi, yes, but that is different then at goodwill. The at usually changes the
definition, and the context is fully implied by what follows afterwards.

On Sun, Dec 27, 2020, 1:06 PM McCoy Smith <mccoy at lexpan.law> wrote:

> Goodwill also has a legal meaning
>
> https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/goodwill
>
> On Dec 27, 2020, at 10:54 AM, Andrew Nassief <kamalandrew55 at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> 
> Goodwill or good will is a common phrase in philosophy meaning to act out
> of personal responsibility on the basis of moral duty and obligation.
>
> While I understand the terminology isn't basic; like I said, there are
> many licenses that don't have basic terminology.
>
> I plan to target many researchers in AI and AI ethics boards as well as in
> fields like distributed computing, bioinformatics, computational genomics,
> etc.
>
> The Apple 2 license targets people who only runs programs on Apple
> computer, their are digital autonomy licenses specifically only for
> blockchain or linux projects.
>
> Some open source licenses are made for special purposes, but still fall
> within the boundaries of OSI. Even w/ the less common terminology, anybody
> can use and adapt this license so either way terminology should be fine.
>
> On Sun, Dec 27, 2020, 12:43 PM Kevin P. Fleming <kevin+osi at km6g.us> wrote:
>
>> While there are clearly a lot of challenges with this license, it is
>> rather difficult to draw any conclusions from the wording when it uses
>> unusual combinations of words. I'm sure this is due to natural
>> language differences, but since the license is written in English it
>> will need to be understandable to a reader of common English.
>>
>> Specifically, I've never seen the phrase 'at goodwill' used before,
>> and I can't find any evidence of it being in common use (or even in
>> uncommon use), so I really can't speculate what is meant by "This is
>> at goodwill." (It doesn't help that there is a large organization in
>> the USA called "Goodwill" so searching for things which are unrelated
>> to it is challenging..)
>>
>> Please try to explain what you intend 'at goodwill' to mean. Thanks.
>>
>> On Sun, Dec 27, 2020 at 12:32 PM Andrew Nassief <kamalandrew55 at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> >
>> > Hi, the Chinese government monitors all network packets of people's IP
>> included distributed software. Lots of open source software is specifically
>> illegal in a communist regime and one would state that likely all the OSI
>> and definition of OSD wouldn't pass the Chinese dissent test.
>> >
>> > This is at goodwill. Morally restrictive is different then being
>> legally restrictive. Making technology that isn't intentionally built to
>> harm humanity to the best of your knowledge is a very low bar of moral
>> accountability. That is the lowest of the bar.
>> >
>> > If people build technology for the sake of human enslavement or harm,
>> then eventually you will have no OSI and the definition of free software at
>> that point is meaningless.
>> >
>> > Moral restrictive and personal reasoning aren't within the context of
>> the law and this would require OSI to further explain and expand their
>> definition much further in ways that allow them to be both for and against
>> free software.
>> >
>> > Anyways I notice most people rather veto before hearing my license by
>> license analysis. I am obviously not trying to waste everybody's time and
>> not welcomed much by this community.
>> >
>> > Inspiring a moral objective of ethics is a good thing that needs to be
>> talked about in tech. You can twist the extent of discrimination to state
>> that people against the distribution of free and open source software is
>> making OSI in violation of rule #6. Anybody can find logical fallacies for
>> rejection in pretty much anything.
>> >
>> > Anyways I plan on providing the license by license analysis quite soon.
>> > _______________________________________________
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>> >
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>> >
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