- From: Jim Ley <jim.ley@gmail.com>
- Date: Fri, 27 Aug 2004 22:09:39 +0100
On Fri, 27 Aug 2004 20:51:18 +0000 (UTC), Ian Hickson <ian at hixie.ch> wrote: > On Fri, 27 Aug 2004, Jim Ley wrote: > > > > Right, could you explain why you were not able to get it assigned to the > > public domain? > > I suggested it, but was told that it was better to have a copyright > supporting a liberal license than to have it in the public domain. One > reason was, if I recall correctly, If you recall it correctly? Surely you can just look at the document which said the situation - you have got this in writing from Opera's lawyers I assume, we're not just relying on a conversation are we? > that if we later wanted to submit this > to a standards organisation, and they wanted to own the copyright (as W3C > would, e.g.), then we wouldn't be able to if we had assigned it to the > public domain. I'm not a lawyer so I didn't question this (and have no > intention to). > > I also do not think the rather simple statement is sufficient licence > > for me to accept, Opera could revoke the licence at any time. > > As far as I am aware, once a license has been granted, it can't be > "ungranted" unless the licensee breaks the license conditions. As you just said above, you're not a lawyer... and I certainly have no idea about Norwegian law, but certainly in US law it's not possible to give a licence that cannot be revoked. ( http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap2.html#203 ) So I think I am right to be concerned, could you be clearer about exactly the advice the lawyers gave you, I find it rather surprsing that after 2 months lawyers have come back with 1 sentance, I've never seen a lawyer write so little. > No news on patent stuff yet. Why not? What's happening, why the delay? - how is Dave Hyatt coming along with his questions to Apple? Jim.
Received on Friday, 27 August 2004 14:09:39 UTC