MirOS Licence

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The MirOS Licence
Author The MirOS Project
Latest version CVS r1.19[1] – can be considered the first version
Published 11 December 2006
DFSG compatible Yes
FSF approved Yes
OSI approved Yes
GPL compatible Yes
Copyleft No
Linking from code with a different license Yes
Website HTML version, UTF-8 plain text version

The MirOS Licence is a free content licence (for software and other free cultural works such as graphical, literal, musical, …) originated at The MirOS Project for their own publications because the ISC license used by OpenBSD was perceived as having problems with wording[2] and too America centric. It has strong roots in the UCB BSD licence and the Historical Permission Notice and Disclaimer with a focus on modern, explicit, legible language and usability by European (except UK), specifically German, authors (while not hindering adoption by authors from other legislations). It is a permissive (“BSD/MIT-style”) licence.

Another novelty is that this licence was specified for any kind of copyrightable work from the start; as such, it does not only meet the Open Source Definition and Debian Free Software Guidelines but also the Open Knowledge Definition and, in fact, has been approved by the OKFN long before OSI did.[1]

The licence has not seen formal legal review, but is listed on ifrOSS’ licence centre webpages.[3] The Free Software Foundation has not formally added the licence as either a free software licence or free documentation license to their pages, but their software directory has a category for it.[4]

It was later seen that some countries have special laws for databases, which should be considered in a later version of this licence, if any, to keep it as generally usable as possible. Patent and trademark law was intentionally not addressed, only copyright law, but the general idea is to have one “copycenter” style licence (more specifically, one that says do with it whatever you want, just don’t pretend it’s not mine and don’t sue me) for everything. This was partially prompted by the dilemma of people using the GPL for documentation because the GFDL is unfree, but the GPL (and all other traditional Open Source licences) was not suited for it.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 CVSweb revision log of the master copy of the text – r1.19 contains the final version of the text, although 1.28 is the current one; the licence has no successor as of now, hence version numbering is not strictly needed
  2. Part 1 and Part 2 of NetBSD developer Hubert Feyrer’s findings
  3. licence centre
  4. category

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.