[od-discuss] Restriction of redistribution under OD 2.0

Tomoaki Watanabe tomoaki.watanabe at gmail.com
Wed Dec 10 04:50:04 UTC 2014


Thank you for the clarification. The current text
makes sense upon re-reading..

I think the prohibition of this type of DRM/ TPM is a somewhat
controversial thing. CC license has such term, and there was
at some point a discussion if that disqualifies some CC licenses
from meeting debian's idea of free software. See, for example,
the following.
http://lists.ibiblio.org/pipermail/cc-licenses/2012-January/006582.html

In other word, some people thinks anti-DRM clause is problematic
to the extent that having such clause disqualifies a license
from being an open license, roughly speaking. (Debian's guideline
is not about license, but about software works under the
license, more strictly speaking).

So it makes sense that the current guideline does not say
"must" but says "may" in the clause of Open Definition.
Some argue such anti-DRM provision should not be allowed
(must not).

Best,

Tomo



On Wed, Dec 10, 2014 at 1:25 PM, Tomoaki Watanabe
<tomoaki.watanabe at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi. I am a bit confused, and therefore curious as to
> what others have to say on this. (And I am not a part of the authority).
>
>>>2.2.6 Technical Restriction Prohibition
>>>The license may prohibit distribution of the work in a manner where technical measures impose restrictions on the exercise of otherwise allowed rights.
>
> Shouldn't this be saying, instead, as follows?
>
>>>2.2.6 Technical Restriction Prohibition
>>>The license may prohibit distribution of the work in a manner where technical measures impose *NO* restrictions on the exercise of otherwise allowed rights.
>
> Tomo
>  OKJapan/ CCJP/ GLOCOM
>
> On Wed, Dec 10, 2014 at 1:13 PM, Peter Murray-Rust <pm286 at cam.ac.uk> wrote:
>> I have just seen the following correspondence
>> http://svpow.com/2014/12/09/on-readcube-and-natures-give-away/#comment-97669
>> which concludes
>>
>> Well, that is ridiculous. Then the Open Definition v2.0 is useless.
>> Completely useless.
>>
>> Was v1.0 the same?
>>
>> and rather than reply to it myself I thought that I would get an
>> authoritative opinion.
>>
>> [Background - the context is Nature's new effort in bringing out DRM'ed (or
>> TPM'ed) scientific publications. The actual materialt is not Open, so that's
>> not the point - it is that knowlegeable people can interpret OD as allowing
>> DRM.
>>
>>
>> --
>> Peter Murray-Rust
>> Reader in Molecular Informatics
>> Unilever Centre, Dep. Of Chemistry
>> University of Cambridge
>> CB2 1EW, UK
>> +44-1223-763069
>>
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