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While software in the public domain may conform with the principles put forth by the open source community (assuming the source is available), this article aims to deal with licenses considered to be open source (and specifically with those approved by the Open Source Intitiative). Since public domain software is under no license, I removed it from the list. -- Stephen Gilbert
No. Open source licenses do not have to be approved by the OSI to be open source or legitimate. There were many open-source licenses before the OSI, and many in use now that are not OSI approved. Please don't conflate the two. The article is correct in its statement that the OSI-approved licenses are just one subset of those available. CC0, for example, qualifies as open source and is GPL-compatible, but does not have official OSI-approval (as of right now. Not sure if approval has been sought.) --1typesetter 08:26, 18 July 2013 (UTC)
Public domain software is explicitly approved as "open source" by the OSI, and it is listed along with other licenses in their own literature, so I've put it back. -- LDC
They seem to be awfully quite about PD software over at OSI. I was halfway through a response saying how I couldn't find any references to PD software on their webpage, when I came across the change history of the Open Source Definition: 1.2 – added public-domain to clause 10., and 1.4 – Now explicit about source code requirement for PD software. It isn't, however, listed on their "approved licenses" page, which threw me off. And so, your revision stands. I'll just add that the source code must be available. -- Stephen Gilbert
I think we should create a seperate page for the list because in my point of view, it seems that the list is the biggest part of the article and it seems that attention has been made to that and not the rest of the article, i suggest it becomes a list -- Saint-Paddy 22:48, 25 Apr 2004 (UTC)
The article currently states "Some open source licenses only permit modification of the source code for personal use or only permit non-commercial redistribution." This is not true: no open source license has such restrictions (if it does, it's not open source). Also, it is not true that "most" free software licenses require sharing of source code (only a few of them do). In fact, the set of free software licenses is almost exactly the same as the set of open source licenses; there was one edge case once, in a rarely-used license if I remember correctly, where it could maybe be said to be one but not the other. In normal practice, though, any license that is a free software license is also an open source license, and vice versa. No citations are given for the aforementioned and other incorrect assertions in the article; the external references do not support them. IMHO it just needs a complete rewrite. I'm sorry I don't have time to do it, but I wanted to at least drop a note here that this article needs work. -- Karl Fogel 20:01, 1 September 2010 (UTC)
When I tried the link to the comparison of open source licenses, it did not work. May be a transient error, but if it persists an alternate link should be found, or it should be removed -- 12.28.106.123 13:58, 27 Jul 2004 (UTC)
I've removed two references to Solaris, one because it was obsolete and the other because it wasn't clear why it was there at all.
The first was under "Non-OSI source licenses". Sun briefly had a non-OSI release of some Solaris 8 source but that's long gone. The Solaris end-user license does not confer access to source.
The second was
If this means "source code has been released that itself defines an open standard" that doesn't fit Solaris, since Solaris is based on open standards, not the other way around. Using it as an example here also opens a can of worms as to whether Solaris itself is open source, or just shares a code base with the open-source OpenSolaris project; I don't think it's worth taking this article down that path when better examples must be available. So, I changed the line to only refer to PGP. -- NapoliRoma 00:41, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
I just found an article which contains the content of list of FSF approved software licences and this article, and the data is even formatted nicely. Seems like a good idea to merge these two articles into comparison of free software licences. Yes, no? -- Gronky 12:42, 15 November 2007 (UTC)
Yes Adleecya Graham ( talk) 05:58, 11 January 2017 (UTC)
I often wonder, and I guess many other do to, why the creative commons licenses aren't open source. I recognise that this is a page about OSI stuff, but it would be useful to have a section detailing why other major free licenses aren't approved by OSI, especially creative commons licenses. -- 210.14.103.34 ( talk) 11:39, 6 December 2007 (UTC)
The CC didn't want to compete with the OSI and so they discouraged the use of CC licenses for source code. With the recent advent of CC0 for source code that has perhaps begun to change. --1typesetter 08:26, 18 July 2013 (UTC)
As far as I know, no much-used OS License, and only one or two OS derived licenses for government agencies or corporations, takes explicit and easily understood notice of the following situation: a U.S. based software originator transfers OS material, under an OS License, to a party in a 2nd country (neither the U.S. nor a U.S. Export Regulations proscribed country.) This 2nd party then transfers the same or modified material, still under the OS License of origin, to a 3rd party who is a resident or a citizen. The 2nd party is not constrained by U.S. Export Regulations.
A few of the much-used OS Licenses implicitly forbid this 2nd->3rd party transfer, but the language is so indirect that most 2nd parties would either miss it completely or fail to understand it.
Why would anyone care? Perhaps because the 1st party would have violated U.S. Export regulations. But to my mind more importantly: because in order to grow the OS movement and expand its scope in a productive way, some developers and OS community folks would like to engage government and corporate entities in the OS movement. These entities are not likely to come in unless they can fully satisfy U.S. Export Regulations, both because they provide static targets for litigation under those regulations, and because they are likely to believe that their own clientele and potential development contributors may wish to have, at one and the same time, the greatest freedom in their contributions, and a clear commitment that their contributions will not violate the intentions of the regulations.
For those that do care, I would appreciate any comments, or suggestions as to the minimal but easily understandable additions or edits to existing OS Licenses that would clear the flaw. Schwenn ( talk) 16:34, 3 July 2008 (UTC)
I resynced the categories with the OSI ( http://www.opensource.org/licenses/category). It is important to remember that we must follow their lead on the categories (if we are to categorize at all). Anything else would be original research. Superm401 - Talk 05:07, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
The current status of the libpng license - referred to on the page as the "libpng/zlib license" is unclear because of the addition of the UCITA clause to the license around 2000. I suggest a new category is required - "modified versions of OSI approved licenses", or something like that.
Jbowler ( talk) 16:25, 30 June 2009 (UTC)
The result of the move request was: page moved. Anthony Appleyard ( talk) 16:19, 19 January 2010 (UTC)
Open source license → Open-source license — like Open-source software — Neustradamus ( ✉) 19:31, 11 January 2010 (UTC)
I do not understand how to find and us those bracket boxes. Someone please add a bias bracket box. This article is flat out wrong it is so biased. Open source does not automatically mean free. Companies can and do release source code while still charging for licensing and releasing the software under proprietary licenses. Open source is opening up the code to customers and the public. Free licensing is allowing end users to modify and distribute the program. One does not automatically equal the other. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.247.234.225 ( talk) 22:24, 29 March 2010 (UTC)
But speaking of bias is it fair to say that identifying free and open source licences as the same is just a common misconception and a confusion propagated by free software advocates? the article itself notes the 'significant overlap' of the two categories, and the overlap is frankly more than significant, the lists differ in only a few cases, and the definitions of the two organizations don't differ in criteria for approval? Won't edit this just yet, but I might try softening the rethoric of that paragraph unless there are objections. Aryah ( talk) 18:14, 8 June 2010 (UTC)
This doesn't really add on to the previous discussion but I find that the way the article currently reads seems biased, primarily the "benefits of open-source" section. Don't get me wrong, I'm all for open-source software, but the way that section is written makes it feel really pro-open-source, without writing the disadvantages. I'm thinking either adding a "disadvantages" section (which would be hard for me personally because I can't think of any) or just removing the benefit section entirely. It could just be me though so I dunno. eva 2pare [talk] 19:33, 14 September 2011 (UTC)
Wait, why in the world was this section changed? The unsigned IP above is clearly wrong, based on the history discussed by Aryah above. Daniel J. Hakimi ( talk) 19:45, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
I am unsure if the distinguish tag should be included as it implies a strong distinction which is not supported by the article. The few sites addressing the difference between free software and open source tend to only claim a very minor difference in approved licenses. This makes me wonder if the tag doesn't do us a disservice by strongly proclaiming in the top that the two types are not to be confused with!. I am personally going to sleep on it for a bit before doing any change to it. Belorn ( talk) 08:30, 22 April 2012 (UTC)
I think the opening paragraph should make it clear that open source licenses are commonly found on works which are not open source. At this point, you can find Apache 2.0 and BSD licenses in the legal notices of hundreds of millions of products that run proprietary software. Sure there might be some version or part of the software that was at one time open source, but, for the most part, but it doesn't mean the version the user has on that device is open source.
Maybe we could say something along these lines:
An open source license is a statement or document provided by the copyright holder of work that grants recipients of the work permission to copy, modify, and redistribute the work. the term "open source license" is itself, misleading, as it is common to find open source licenses attached to proprietary (non open source) works. Most open source licenses specify some conditions along with the permissions they grant to users. The most common condition found in open source licenses is the requirement to preserve certain legal notices, such as copyright statements and a copy of the license itself. Some open source licenses also have conditions placed on distribution of the work that require you to make available to recipients of the work a copy of the human readable source code. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Joshuagay ( talk • contribs) 20:13, 8 November 2017 (UTC)
"Open source" (without dash, with dash, and disambiguation) are now redirected to the improved Open source disambiguation which may become a WP:broad concept article to reduce the extreme number of disambiguation-link alarms. Please read more on the latest developments on Talk:Open source and feel free to improve Open source. ~ JasonCarswell (talk) 17:06, 19 November 2018 (UTC)
Hello, I am employed by Boston University's Fineman & Pappas Law Libraries. After reviewing this Wikipedia page, I believe that information from one of our faculty's scholarship might provide a valuable addition to this page. I would appreciate it if this requested edit could be reviewed.
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
Add the following lines (in bold) to second paragraph: However, open-source licenses may have some restrictions, particularly regarding the expression of respect to the origin of software, such as a requirement to preserve the name of the authors and a copyright statement within the code, or a requirement to redistribute the licensed software only under the same license (as in a copyleft license). There has previously been debates about whether open source licenses, which permit copyholders to use, transfer, and modify software, have adequate consideration, should be viewed by the courts as legally enforceable contracts. [1] While some academics have argued that open source licenses are not contracts because there is no consideration, others have argued that the significant societal value provided by the role that open source licenses play in promoting software development and improvement by facilitating access to source code offers adequate consideration. [2]
Cf2022 ( talk) 04:30, 5 April 2021 (UTC)Cf2022
References
The article should contain at least a brief mention of the most prominent/common examples, MIT, GNU, etc., similar to what is at Free software license#Comparison. Caleb Stanford ( talk) 22:10, 23 November 2021 (UTC)
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
GA toolbox |
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Reviewing |
Reviewer: Sohom Datta ( talk · contribs) 13:18, 11 February 2024 (UTC)
Taking this on, it might take me a while since I will be travelin over this week. Sohom ( talk) 13:18, 11 February 2024 (UTC)
The developer who uses only his or her own brain in a closed project is going to fall behind the developer who knows how to create an open, evolutionary context in which feedback exploring the design space, code contributions, bug-spotting, and other improvements come from from hundreds (perhaps thousands) of people. But the traditional Unix world was prevented from pushing this approach to the ultimate by several factors. One was the legal contraints of various licenses, trade secrets, and commercial interests." Rjjiii ( talk)
The seminal The Cathedral and The Bazaar, Eric Raymond’s book on Open Source, emphasised the advantages of distributed, collaborative development compared to the controlled and closed development practices of proprietary software vendors as one of the first texts on Open Source." Rjjiii ( talk) 02:17, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
Next batch:
The ever lengthening chain of title is reflective of the robust creative energies of community development. A major open source software program may have a long chain of title by the time it arrives on your computer.". Rjjiii ( talk) 04:26, 11 March 2024 (UTC)
addressing/covering the modern criticism". That was a good catch and will results in better NPOV. Rjjiii ( talk) 04:26, 11 March 2024 (UTC)
Where the copyright owner’s key focus is on ensuring that an organisation complies with Open Source licence terms, such preliminary proceedings are an effective tool. However, where proceedings are used to obtain as much money as possible out of a court settlement or declaration to cease and desist as possible, thus allowing the copyright owner to trigger penalty payments at will, there is a high risk that the enforcement may become formalistic and that a copyright owner may suggest very detailed licence interpretation, which may both be impractical and harmful for the Open Source community at large. To safeguard against this, the Software Freedom Conservancy,15 the FSF,16 and the Netfilter project,17 organisations which hold code on behalf of developers, whose work is detailed further in Chapter 18, and whose code is often the subject of enforcement actions relating to Open Source, defined principles of community- oriented General Public License (GPL) enforcement, aiming to ensure that any enforcement action taking by individual Open Source copyright owners is consistent in ensuring compliance and that it is not centred on generating payments.
I left the following feedback for the creator/future reviewers while reviewing this article: Please remember to tag redirects that you create per WP:REDCAT.
voorts ( talk/ contributions) 01:58, 12 May 2024 (UTC)
"This offers protection against proprietary software consuming code without giving back." and more in the "Limitations" section. The entire point of free software is that it's reusable, and as the text admits, proprietary uses are often following the licensing terms. It would be more in keeping with NPOV to state that open-source licensed software is often reused in proprietary projects, that this has benefits for the proprietary side, and is criticized and seen as unfair by some open-source contributors. Indeed the "Limitations" section could be split into, say "Use in proprietary software" and the content about trademarks possibly moved up in the article where trademarks were introduced. ( t · c) buidhe 04:03, 14 May 2024 (UTC)
@
Nickelpro:, you removed this setence from the lead, "While the goals behind the terms are different, open-source licenses and
free software licenses describe the same thing.
"
[5] This reflects reliable sources even if it may sound confusing. The book-length sources cited in the article like St. Laurent (2004) use the terms to mean the same thing consistently. In addition to the already cited sources, check out these that specifically address definitions:
Essentially, their concept of open source licensing is the same, but their motivations for open source licensing differ." [6]
Both communities consider more or less the same licenses as free respectively open. A license accepted as a free software license does most probably also qualify as an open source license and vice versa (FSF 2006g). Therefore, the lists of free software licenses and open source licenses are almost identical." [7]
Three definitions: One of the consequences of the division between the free and open source communities is that two organizations exist to approve such things as licenses: The Open Source Initiative (OSI), and the FSF. If you read the OSI’s Open Source Definition and the FSF’s Free Software Definition, you’ll find that they are simply rewordings of the same ideas. Look at the list of licenses approved by both organizations, and you will find that the major licenses are also identical. Where they are not, the main reason is usually that the writer of the license has not yet submitted it to one authority for approval." [8]
What are synonyms for open source software?: “Open source software” is also called “Free software”, “libre software”, “Free/open source software (FOSS or F/OSS)”, and “Free/Libre/Open Source Software (FLOSS)”. The term “Free software” predates the term “open source software”, but the term “Free software” has sometimes been misinterpreted as meaning “no cost”, which is not the intended meaning in this context. (“Free” in “Free software” refers to freedom, not price.) The term “open source software” is sometimes hyphenated as “open-source software”." [9]
Synonyms: "free software license", "FSF-approved", "open source license", and "OSI-approved": The terms "free software license" and "open source license" are essentially synonymous, and I treat them so throughout this book. Technically, the former term refers to licenses confirmed by the Free Software Foundation as meeting the "four freedoms" of the Free Software Definition (FSD, see https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html), while the latter term refers to licenses approved by the Open Source Initiative as meeting the Open Source Definition (OSD, see https://opensource.org/osd). However, if you read the FSD and the OSD, it becomes obvious that the two definitions delineate the same freedoms — which is not surprising, given the historical background explained in the section called “"Free" Versus "Open Source"”. The inevitable, and in some sense deliberate, result is that the two organizations have approved the same set of licenses." [10]
Feel free to suggest wording for the lead that better summarizes this point, Rjjiii ( talk) 05:38, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
Licenses of open source software (OSS) are quiet various but can be categorised into three. That is GPL (GNU general Public License) like, LGPL (GNU Lesser general Public License) like, or MPL (Mozilla Public License) like. [...]" It also doesn't contradict the removed source, as it still talks about the certification process and not two different categories, "
There are many open source software in our society. OSI certificate some of them as open source license while FSF certificate some of them as free software or GPL compatible Licenses." The edit places undue weight on minor differences between the FSF and OSI ( WP:UNDUE). For example, "many licenses" could be confusing for someone with little background on the subject. All major FOSS licenses have been approved by both groups (GPL, LGPL, MIT, BSD, Apache, etc.). Rjjiii ( talk) 22:32, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
So what is FLOSS? Two main concepts of the nomenclature should be separated: Free/Libre and Open. There has been vexatious dispute between these two ideologies
Despite advocates’ different points of view towards one or the other position, and the different weight that each position gives to ethical and business concerns, the difference lies more in a philosophical level of abstraction than in a substantial one. This does not mean that there are no practical differences between these two definitions: the Open Source definition is some how broader than the Free Software one.
The Open Source Initiative (OSI) reports 55 OSI approved licences. The Free Software Foundation (FSF) reports 43 Free Software approved licences compatible with the GPL and 39 licences that are deemed Free Software but not GPL compatible
The key difference between the meaning of "free" and "open source" in the open source community is the type of license used for the software.
By contrast, the Open Source Initiative's advocacy of OSS not only approves the GPL and GPL compatible licenses but also endorses several other "open source" licenses that are not approved by the Free Software Foundation.
In the definition set forth by the Free Software Foundation, these include “the freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software” (Free Software Foundation 2013). The Open Source Initiative (OSI) provides a broader set of licenses and differing guidelines on what software conforms to its definition.
What matters is there exists a distinction" to whom? Reliable sources largely treat them as synonyms. "
There's nothing WP:UNDUE about facts" yes, it would be possible to write factual and verifiable material this is still undue as described by Wikipedia:Neutral point of view. Bahn and Dressel (2006) give the BSD license as their example of something that is an open-source license but not a free software license. The modified BSD license has been approved by the FSF [12] and the OSI. [13] Salter (2014) and Perry (2010) are still talking about which organization has approved which license and endorse which criteria. The Free Software Foundation emphasizes a difference. [14] The OSI says "'Free software' and 'open source software' are two terms for the same thing: software released under licenses that guarantee a certain specific set of freedoms". [15] WP:RS say there are three directly related sets of criteria to define the subject. The article should summarize that for readers, Rjjiii ( talk) 01:59, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, it would be possible to write factual and verifiable material this is still undue", you're correct of course, my point is simply that there factually is a difference, saying otherwise is false, and WP:UNDUE does not justify falsities, only not presenting all the minutia of the truth. It is acceptable to make no claims about the nature of the relationship between open source and free licenses because the differences are minute, but it is not acceptable to state no such differences exist.