Open Source Initiative under pressure to reduce number of licences
Open Source Initiative under pressure to reduce number of licences

OSI urged to reform open source licensing

Too many licences threaten open source community, claim vendors

Written by Tom Sanders at LinuxWorld in Boston

The current multiplicity of open source licences creates a "clear and present danger" to the open source community, according to commercial vendors including Computer Associates, HP and Novell.

The firms have begun pressing the Open Source Initiative (OSI) to reduce the large number of approved licences to just three.

The OSI is in charge of labelling licences as officially open source, based on compliance with a predefined set of criteria. The OSI website currently lists 58 official open source licences.

"Approving licences simply based on the compliance of the specification, rather than on the basis of the ability to further open source business models, represents a clear and present danger to the very core of these open source models," said Martin Fink, HP's vice president of Linux, in a keynote at LinuxWorld in Boston. "If this is the path the OSI continues to choose, it is picking a path towards irrelevance."

HP is going through the Open Source Development Labs to increase the pressure on OSI.

Fink is joined by John Swainson, chief executive at Computer Associates, who believes that there is a need for just three open source licences: the General Public Licence (GPL); the Lesser General Public Licence; and a version that has more restrictions for applications in commercial environments.

The latter is needed for enterprise users that want to deploy open source applications in conjunction with proprietary or home-grown solutions. The GPL would force them to disclose the source code of the proprietary software, which is unacceptable for many enterprises.

"God created GPL for a reason," Swainson said in a presentation at LinuxWorld, claiming that it is the best licence around.

There is, however, no standard for a more restrictive commercial licence. Major software vendors including CA, IBM and Sun have instead created their own versions, but these rarely get updated after they have been approved by OSI, according to Swainson.

The controversy over open source licences was sparked by the approval of Sun Microsystems' Common Development and Distribution Licence (CDDL) last January. The CDDL was used to publish the source code for Solaris 10.

Critics including the Free Software Foundation claim that the CDDL has little to do with open source, because it only grants open source rights to users that subject themselves to every aspect of the licence.

Even though OSI approved the CDDL, Novell chief executive Jack Messman told vnunet.com that he does not consider it to be truly open source. "Sun is open sourcing Solaris on its own terms. That's not open source," he said.

Messman added that he would support CA's plan to create three basic open source licences. "OSI has allowed the [open source] licence to become fragmented to suit the needs of particular distributors. We need to get fewer licences. Fewer is better," he said.

Tags:

Further reading

Fears grow over 'unworkable' GPL

Fortinet case 'good news for Microsoft', claims analyst   More...

Industry to adopt open source constitution

Sun's CDDL as starting framework   More...

OSI takes on licence proliferation

Templates will create clarity   More...

Sun slams predatory GPL

Other options offer better balance   More...

Related articles

Firms struggle with open source licences

59 per cent lack open source licensing policies   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

24 Jul 2008

3.68 MBSpammer jailed, Esquire e-cover, and network passwords More...

23 Jul 2008

2.99 MBSmall time security, official 'spying' requests and a spammer jail break More...

22 Jul 2008

3.22 MBSat-nav crashes, open source security and female gamers More...

Poll

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

Are you happy making an online purchase from another European country?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

Credit card transaction

Credit card fraud rampant in the UK

Attempted frauds go unreported and ignored, analysts claim   More...

Intel

Intel rolls out new embedded line-up

System-on-a-chip offerings promise footprint and power saving   More...

Advertisement

Network cables

Tech giants collaborate on wireless HD

Another attempt at cable-free transmission in the home   More...

iPhone fever fills AT&T coffers

US provider cashes in on Apple smartphone   More...

Advertisement