SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Integrating IT >> Outsourcing and Application Service Providers (ASP)

Appeal court rules in favour of open source

Appeal court rules in favour of open source

By:  Maureen Garde and Jeffrey Neuburger  On: 17 Aug 2008 For: CIO (GM) Creator

A court ruling in the U.S. says open source licensors have a say in how their software is modified and distributed. How developers can stay on the right side of the law

Open-source software has been in widespread use for longer than most people realize-consider the majority of Web sites running on Apache Web server software for more than a decade. It has particularly flourished in the business community over the last several years, despite some uncertainty regarding the legal status of open source software licenses.

But an opinion by the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit this week is likely to go a long way toward dispelling that uncertainty.

Change Canada’s copyright act

Sign the petition to amend Bill C-61

In substance, the court ruled that the open source licensors in some circumstances will have recourse under copyright law, and it did so in definitive terms: "Copyright holders who engage in open source licensing have the right to control the modification and distribution of copyrighted material."

The ruling in Jacobsen v. Katzer concerns an open source software program made available in source code form for download and use by the public, free of charge, subject to the provisions of the open source "Artistic License."

In simplified terms, the Artistic License permits the modification of the source code or its incorporation into other software programs, but requires any distributor of such programs to include with any distribution certain information identifying the source of the included code, as well as text the Artistic License itself, among a number of other things.

Jacobsen, the head of the group that developed the code, alleged in a federal copyright infringement lawsuit that Katzer and his company incorporated certain of the groups' code into his own competing proprietary software product, but failed to comply with the requirements of the Artistic License.

In defense of the copyright infringement claim, Katzer (who admitted that his program used some of the code) argued that the open source code was provided free of charge pursuant to an intentionally broad, non-exclusive license, and that he had not exceeded the scope of the license in incorporating the code into his own product. The failure to include the required information with his product, he argued, was merely a breach of a license term.

The difference between exceeding the scope of a license, and merely breaching a condition, is that the flexible and powerful remedies under copyright law are available only if the scope of the license has been exceeded. If a condition is breached, then only the relatively less powerful breach of contract remedies is available. In the case of open source software that is distributed free of charge, breach of contract remedies are further limited.

The appeals court concluded that the Artistic License "on its face ... creates conditions," that can be enforced under copyright law. The court's opinion also broadly affirmed the societal value of the open source approach: "There are substantial benefits, including economic benefits, to the creation and distribution of copyright works under public licenses that range far beyond traditional license royalties."


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 558   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Maureen Garde and Jeffrey Neuburger Maureen Garde and Jeffrey Neuburger is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

How not to get sued by open source coders
How not to get sued by open source codersA Fasken Martineau DuMoulin lawyer says many firms do not teach workers how to manage open source software. CIPPIC weighs in
XAware goes GPL
XAware goes GPLThe provider of commercial data integration software goes the open source route.
Software tool lets you use 'borrowed' code without worry
Software tool lets you use 'borrowed' code without worry The phenomenon of developers happily borrowing code from various projects to avoid having to reinvent it sometimes causes problems. For instance, a code snippet reused from a newsgroup posting could actually have come from a copyrighted open source project. Now managers can automate the process of checking their code with protexIP 4.0 from Black Duck Software.
We’re not thieves. We just can’t read contracts (McAfee and Open Source)
i have borrowed a headline from an earlier posting by shane schick to discuss something i saw this week. mcafee filed a report last month with the securities and exchange commission that made a few statements about risks associated with their use of some open source software. these s
blog comments powered by Disqus