License proliferation

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

License proliferation is the phenomenon of an abundance of already existing and the continued creation of new

FOSS ecosystem negatively by the burden of increasingly complex license selection, license interaction, and license compatibility considerations.[1]

Impact

Often when a software developer would like to merge portions of different software programs they are unable to do so because the licenses are incompatible. When software under two different licenses can be merged into a larger software work, the licenses are said to be compatible. As the number of licenses increases, the probability that a free and open-source software (FOSS) developer will want to merge software that are available under incompatible licenses increases. There is also a greater cost to companies that wish to evaluate every FOSS license for software packages that they use.[1] Strictly speaking, no one is in favor of license proliferation. Rather, the issue stems from the tendency for organizations to write new licenses in order to address real or perceived needs for their software releases.

License compatibility

License proliferation is especially a problem when licenses have only limited or complicated

GPLv3.[9] The 2007 released GPLv3 was criticized by several authors for adding another incompatible license in the FOSS ecosystem.[10][11][12][13][14][15][16]

Vanity licenses

A vanity license is a license that is written by a company or person for no other reason than to write their own license ("

NIH syndrome").[17] If a new license is created that has no obvious improvement or difference over another more common FOSS license it can often be criticized as a vanity license. As of 2008, many people create a custom new license for their newly released program, without knowing the requirements for a FOSS license and without realizing that using a nonstandard license can make that program almost useless to others.[18]

Solution approaches

GitHub's stance

In July 2013, GitHub started a license selection wizard called choosealicense.[19] GitHub's choosealicense frontpage offers as a quick selection only three licenses: the MIT License, the Apache License and the GNU General Public License. Some additional licenses are offered on subpages and via links.[20] Following in 2015, approx. 77% of all licensed projects on GitHub were licensed under at least one of these three licenses.[21]

Google's stance

From 2006

Google Code only accepted projects licensed under the following seven licenses:[22]

One year later, around 2008, the

AGPLv3 to reduce license proliferation.[24]

In 2010, Google removed these restrictions, and announced that it would allow projects to use any OSI-approved license (see OSI's stance below),[25] but with the limitation that public domain projects are only allowed as single case decision.

OSI's stance

Open Source Initiative (OSI) maintains a list of approved licenses.[26] Early in its history, the OSI contributed to license proliferation by approving vanity and non-reusable licenses. In 2004 an OSI License Proliferation Project was started[27] has prepared a License Proliferation Report in 2007.[28] The report defined classes of licenses:

  • Licenses that are popular and widely used or with strong communities
  • International licenses
  • Special purpose licenses
  • Other/Miscellaneous licenses
  • Licenses that are redundant with more popular licenses
  • Non-reusable licenses
  • Superseded licenses
  • Licenses that have been voluntarily retired
  • Uncategorized Licenses

The group of "popular" licenses include nine licenses:

.

FSF's stance

Richard Stallman, former president of Free Software Foundation, and Bradley M. Kuhn, former Executive Director, have argued against license proliferation since 2000, when they instituted the FSF license list, which urges developers to license their software under GPL-compatible free software license(s), though multiple GPL-incompatible free software licenses are listed with a comment stating that there is no problem using and/or working on a piece of software already under the licenses in question while also urging readers of the list not to use those licenses on software they write.[29]

FSF Europe
consistently recommends the use of the GNU GPL as much as possible, and when that is not possible, to use GPL-compatible licenses.

Others

In 2005 Intel has voluntarily retracted their Intel Open Source License from the OSI list of open source licenses and has also ceased to use or recommend this license to reduce license proliferation.[31]

The 451group created in June 2009 a proliferation report called The Myth of Open Source License Proliferation.[32] A 2009 paper from the University of Washington School of Law titled Open Source License Proliferation: Helpful Diversity or Hopeless Confusion? called for three things as a solution: "A Wizzier Wizzard" (for license selection), "Best Practices and Legacy Licenses", "More Legal Services For Hackers".[33] The OpenSource Software Collaboration Counseling (OSSCC) recommends, based on the originally nine recommended OSI licenses, five licenses: the Apache License 2.0, New BSD License, CDDL, MIT license, and to some degree the MPL, as they support collaboration, grant patent use and offer patent protection. Notably missing is the GPL as "this license cannot be used inside other works under a different license."[34]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "OSI and License Proliferation" on FOSSBazaar by Martin Michlmayr on August 21st, 2008. "Too many different licenses makes it difficult for licensors to choose: it's difficult to choose a good license for a project because there are so many. Some licenses do not play well together: some open source licenses do not inter-operate well with other open source licenses, making it hard to incorporate code from other projects. Too many licenses makes it difficult to understand what you are agreeing to in a multi-license distribution: since a FOSS application typically contains code with different licenses and people use many applications which each contain one or several licenses, it's difficult to see what your obligations are."
  2. ^ "The Free-Libre / Open Source Software (FLOSS) License Slide" by David A. Wheeler on September 27, 2007.
  3. ^ Wheeler, David A. (February 16, 2014). "Make Your Open Source Software GPL-Compatible. Or Else". Archived from the original on November 13, 2023.
  4. ^ "Various Licenses and Comments about Them", GNU. Archived 2000-08-15 at the Wayback Machine.
  5. University of Namur – Belgium. p. 7. Archived from the original
    (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved May 30, 2015. Copyleft is the main source of compatibility problems
  6. ^ Hanwell, Marcus D. (January 28, 2014). "Should I use a permissive license? Copyleft? Or something in the middle?". opensource.com. Retrieved May 30, 2015. Permissive licensing simplifies things One reason the business world, and more and more developers [...], favor permissive licenses is in the simplicity of reuse. The license usually only pertains to the source code that is licensed and makes no attempt to infer any conditions upon any other component, and because of this there is no need to define what constitutes a derived work. I have also never seen a license compatibility chart for permissive licenses; it seems that they are all compatible.
  7. ^ "Licence Compatibility and Interoperability". Open-Source Software - Develop, share, and reuse open source software for public administrations. joinup.ec.europa.eu. Archived from the original on June 17, 2015. Retrieved May 30, 2015. The licences for distributing free or open source software (FOSS) are divided in two families: permissive and copyleft. Permissive licences (BSD, MIT, X11, Apache, Zope) are generally compatible and interoperable with most other licences, tolerating to merge, combine or improve the covered code and to re-distribute it under many licences (including non-free or "proprietary").
  8. Apache foundation (May 30, 2015). "GPL compatibility"
    . Retrieved May 30, 2015. Apache 2 software can therefore be included in GPLv3 projects, because the GPLv3 license accepts our software into GPLv3 works. However, GPLv3 software cannot be included in Apache projects. The licenses are incompatible in one direction only, and it is a result of ASF's licensing philosophy and the GPLv3 authors' interpretation of copyright law.
  9. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions about the GNU Licenses – Is GPLv3 compatible with GPLv2?". gnu.org. Retrieved June 3, 2014. No. Some of the requirements in GPLv3, such as the requirement to provide Installation Information, do not exist in GPLv2. As a result, the licenses are not compatible: if you tried to combine code released under both these licenses, you would violate section 6 of GPLv2. However, if code is released under GPL "version 2 or later," that is compatible with GPLv3 because GPLv3 is one of the options it permits.
  10. ^ Landley, Rob. "CELF 2013 Toybox talk". landley.net. Retrieved August 21, 2013. GPLv3 broke "the" GPL into incompatible forks that can't share code.
  11. ^ Asay, Clark D. "Michigan Telecommunications and Technology Law Review Volume 14 - Issue 22008 The General Public License Version 3.0: Making or Breaking the Foss Movement". law.umich.edu. In the end, GPLv3 constitutes license proliferation.
  12. ^ Nikolai Bezroukov (2000). "Comparative merits of GPL, BSD and Artistic licences (Critique of Viral Nature of GPL v.2 - or In Defense of Dual Licensing Idea)". Archived from the original on December 22, 2001. Viral property stimulates proliferation of licenses and contributes to the "GPL-enforced nightmare" -- a situation when many other licenses are logically incompatible with the GPL and make life unnecessary difficult for developers working in the Linux environment (KDE is a good example here, Python is a less known example). I think that this petty efforts to interpret GPL as a "holy text" are non-productive discussion that does not bring us anywhere. And they directly contributed to the proliferation of different "free software" licenses.
  13. ^ Byfield, Bruce (November 22, 2011). "7 Reasons Why Free Software Is Losing Influence: Page 2". Datamation.com. Retrieved August 23, 2013. At the time, the decision seemed sensible in the face of a deadlock. But now, GPLv2 is used for 42.5% of free software, and GPLv3 for less than 6.5%, according to Black Duck Software.
  14. Balkanisation
    of the entire Open Source Universe upon which we rely.
  15. ^ Ronacher, Armin (July 23, 2013). "Licensing in a Post Copyright World". lucumr.pocoo.org. Retrieved November 18, 2015. The License Compatibility Clusterfuck - When the GPL is involved the complexities of licensing becomes a non fun version of a riddle. So many things to consider and so many interactions to consider. And that GPL incompatibilities are still an issue that actively effects people is something many appear to forget. For instance one would think that the incompatibility of the GPLv2 with the Apache Software License 2.0 should be a thing of the past now that everything upgrades to GPLv3, but it turns out that enough people are either stuck with GPLv2 only or do not agree with the GPLv3 that some Apache Software licensed projects are required to migrate. For instance Twitter's Bootstrap is currently migrating from ASL2.0 to MIT precisely because some people still need GPLv2 compatibility. Among those projects that were affected were Drupal, WordPress, Joomla, the MoinMoin Wiki and others. And even that case shows that people don't care that much about licenses any more as Joomla 3 just bundled bootstrap even though they were not licenses in a compatible way (GPLv2 vs ASL 2.0). The other traditional case of things not being GPL compatible is the OpenSSL project which has a license that does not go well with the GPL. That license is also still incompatible with the GPLv3. The whole ordeal is particularly interesting as some not so nice parties have started doing license trolling through GPL licenses.
  16. ^ Are you sure you want to use the GPL? by Armin Ronacher (2009)
  17. ^ Sharing medical software: FOSS licensing in medicine on freesoftwaremagazine.com by Fred Trotter (2007-06-14)
  18. ^ "David A. Wheeler's Blog". dwheeler.com.
  19. ^ GitHub finally takes open source licenses seriously on Infoworld by Simon Phipps on July 2013
  20. ^ Choosing an open source license doesn't need to be scary - Which of the following best describes your situation? on choosealicense.com (accessed 2015-11-29)
  21. ^ Open source license usage on GitHub.com on March 9, 2015 by Ben Balter on github.com "MIT 44.69%, [...]GPLv2 12.96%, Apache 11.19%, GPLv3 8.88%"
  22. ^ Ed Burnette (November 2, 2006). "Google says no to license proliferation".
    ZDNet. Archived from the original
    on February 24, 2007. Retrieved September 11, 2010.
  23. ^ Greg Stein (May 28, 2009). "Standing Against License Proliferation". Archived from the original on June 1, 2008. Retrieved September 11, 2010.
  24. ^ License Proliferation - Less is More, One is Best on January 27th, 2009 by Ernest M. Park "Chris DiBona from Google suffered the slings and arrows of the OSS community when he rejected the AGPLv3 license for Google Code repository, citing license proliferation as one of the reasons."
  25. ^ Chris DiBona (September 10, 2010). "License Evolution and Hosting Projects on Code.Google.Com". Retrieved September 11, 2010.
  26. ^ OSI Approved Licenses on opensource.org
  27. ^ License Proliferation Project on opensource.com (2004)
  28. ^ License Proliferation Report Archived 2012-12-12 at the Wayback Machine on opensource.com (2007)
  29. ^ The earliest archived version of the license list reflects this position. Bradley M. Kuhn (August 15, 2000). "Various Licenses and Comments about Them". Free Software Foundation. pp. 37–39. Archived from the original on August 15, 2000. Retrieved November 29, 2015.
  30. ^ How GPLv3 tackles license proliferation on linuxdevices.com
  31. ^ Marson, Ingrid (March 31, 2005). "Intel to stop using open-source license". cnet.com. CNet. Retrieved October 6, 2014.
  32. ^ The Myth of Open Source License Proliferation on the451group.com
  33. ^ Open Source License Proliferation: Helpful Diversity or Hopeless Confusion? on law.washington.edu by Robert W. Gomulkiewicz on 2009
  34. ^ License compatibility on osscc.net

External links