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Message
From: Richard Herveille<richard@h...>
Date: Fri Jan 7 08:21:40 CET 2005
Subject: [oc] License
> > What Mr. Herveille wrote: > > >As an addition to Rudi's points, we need to define a > derivative work. > > >In my opinion the final derivative work is a finished chip. The > > no, a derivative work is a modified version of the code. > > The GDSII file, .sdf and other are "results". The status of > the final chip is quite special : it's a tangible thing so > not cover by copyright law. But it still a result of > copyright material.
This is the way you see it. But that doesn't mattter. All that matters is what will hold up in court. Any I can argue that a chip, based on some piece of open source IP, is derived from that piece of IP. And thus it is a derivative work.
This is exactly the point all these discussions are about. It is not clear. You interpret it this way, I can argue/interpret it that way. We need a CLEAR license.
> > >documentation of the chip should clearly provide credits and the > > >disclaimer. So if anybody uses a chip containing open > source IP on a > > >board, the board's documentation does not need to provide > credits and > > >the disclaimer. > > Please, no flame like in the X11 project ! :)
Eh? Que? What's wrong with what I just stated??
> In fact, we need 2 kinds of licence. BSD one and LGPL like > one to make every one happy. (i never wrote code that a > compagny could reused without contributing back, there > contribution is for me the little fee to use my code, that's > quite few comparre to usual closed licence)
I am using BSD style licenses and I can assure you I am getting plenty of feedback from commercial companies.
Cheers, Richard
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