Open Source Beer Served Cold, With a Heated Licensing Discussion 112
sethopia writes "Sam Muirhead enjoys a couple of open source beers and delves into their licenses (Creative Commons BY-NC-SA) and the recent CC Non Commercial license controversy. As Sam writes, 'Depending on your point of view, the Non Commercial license is either the methadone that can wean copyright junkies off their all-rights-reserved habit, or it is a gateway drug to the psychedelic and dangerously addictive world of open source and free culture.'"
What's next? (Score:1)
What's next? Open-source chocolate chip cookies?
Re:What's next? (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.jibble.org/cookies.php [jibble.org]
Re:What's next? (Score:4, Informative)
Open source cola [wikipedia.org] has already been done too.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Which meaning of "free"? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Which meaning of "free"? (Score:4, Funny)
It's beer as in free.
Re: (Score:2)
free as in it's free if you do all the work and buy the ingredients to something that has a recipe that's not secret.
next up open source pizza.
Re: (Score:2)
Pizza is already open sauce pie. How deep do you want to go?
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Which meaning of "free"? (Score:5, Informative)
no we don't [google.com].
Recipes aren't copyrightable. Any recipe you can find is "free as in freedom".
Re: (Score:2)
Recipes aren't copyrightable. Any recipe you can find is "free as in freedom".
Not quite. Recipes are sets of instructions on how to combine and process ingredients into a finished product.
That makes a recipe a description of a description of a METHOD, which is patentable in the United States. [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:1)
Not quite. Recipes are sets of instructions on how to combine and process ingredients into a finished product.
That makes a recipe a description of a description of a METHOD, which is patentable in the United States. [wikipedia.org]
More importantly, it's a method for transforming matter. It is a patentable subject, but overcoming prior art is usually quite difficult.
Re: (Score:2)
It is a patentable subject, but overcoming prior art is usually quite difficult.
Maybe in a country with a sane patent system, but in the US, an estimated 30% of granted patents are duplicates.
Source: http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/441/when-patents-attack [thisamericanlife.org]
While I thought the program was extremely interesting and a good listen, if that sort of thing isn't for you, you can read the transcript. http://www.thisamericanlife.org/sites/default/files/TAL441_transcript.pdf [thisamericanlife.org] -- the statistic is near the top of page 10.
Re: (Score:2)
And since patents have absolutely nothing to do with copyrights the parent's post stands, at least for a minimalist bare-bones recipe.
In truth the actual wording of a recipe is in fact copyrightable, provided that it expresses sufficient creativity to clearly be a distinct product from the method information it contains.
Re: (Score:2)
You're right that patents and copyrights are completely different.
That said, tell me, honestly, that you don't think patents are a way to make an idea "less than free"
Re: (Score:2)
Except for all the prior art...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Is that Free as in beer, or Free as in beer?
I came for that comment, and now I can leave.
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Copyrightable? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Copyrightable? (Score:5, Insightful)
The skill of a good chef is not in the recipe, but in the execution.
Anyone can follow a recipe; that doesn't make you a chef.
Re: (Score:3)
Zee skeell ooff a guud cheff is nut in zee receepe-a, boot in zee ixecooshun. Bork Bork Bork!
Re: (Score:2)
I think you mean:
The fuck were you thinking working from a fucking cookbook, you fucking donkey?
FTFY
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
By the time you get to be a chef, you've probably got a good handle on how to make a lot of different things and don't need a recipe. I'm not a chef, but I can bake most pastries, breads, and pizza dough without a recipe and often don't even measure ingredients. A recipe is often bad - it gives you an idea, but it takes experience to know when a dough is too hard or soft, for instance, and that may be due to, say, eggs being slightly larger or smaller than the ones in the recipe.
I've also gotten to the poin
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm all for open source, but could
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Copyrightable? (Score:4, Insightful)
I would agree — it might be clearer in some countries than in others, but the mere list of ingredients, and the process of putting them together, is not capable of being the subject of copyright in itself. Here, there seems to be a greater emphasis on the aspect of transparency, and the publication of something which, for many, probably amounts to a trade secret. As such, irrespective of the copyrightability of the recipe, the real joy for me is that it is the manufacturer publishing the recipe, for others to make, enjoy and modify.
Whether a licence should be placed on that recipe is more of a concern, though, is more of a concern — it attempts to impose protection on something incapable of protection. For those who argue that these licences are contracts, there's perhaps less of an issue, but for those who see them as simple licences, which only work because of the permission to perform an otherwise restricted act, it is perhaps not ideal.
Conversely, could one argue that this is the licensing of a trade secret? Potentially a tough argument, on the basis that it would seem to flaunt one of the core tenets of secrecy, given that it is published, and an argument which could be problematic through an over-extension of copyright, but, in spirit, this seems closer to what is being done here than copyright licensing.
Re:Copyrightable? (Score:4, Interesting)
Uniform Trade Secrets Act (not itself a law, but a model law which has been adopted by many states with minor modifications):
"'Trade secret' means information, including a formula, pattern, compilation, program, device, method, technique, or process, that:
(i) derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to, and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by, other persons who can obtain economic value from its disclosure or use, and
(ii) is the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the circumstances to maintain its secrecy.
It is no longer a trade secret. Period. None of the obligations of the CC licence impose a secrecy obligation, therefore the recipe lost whatever claim it had to trade secret protection. It is readily ascertainable by proper means, and not subect to reasonable efforts to maintain its secrecy.
So long as you don't use this particular copy of the recipie to manufacture your commercial beer, you're free to use the ingredients and process to manufacture your commercial beer. Reduce the recipie to a bare list of ingredients and a minimal description of the process, remaining as objectively factual as possible. Avoid quoting anything that you absolutely do not need to. Then go about your business.
The law concerning recipies is clear and settled. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 is your friend.
Re: (Score:2)
Uniform Trade Secrets Act ... The law concerning recipies is clear and settled. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 is your friend.
Thanks — particularly for those of you in the US, those two things are worth knowing.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
food and drink we force to give the info without anything in return.food and drink we force to give the info without anything in return.
What do you mean. If it's in a restaurant, you are paying the chef for the food. Otherwise where do you see recipes ? In cooking books or magazines. Which you pay for. It's not a case of something for nothing.
Re: (Score:2)
if we are gonna force the creators to list the ingredients in order of amount (thus pretty much forcing them to include the recipe) shouldn't they get something for that?
I'm not sure which law forces a company to provide a list of ingredients — some kind of consumer protection / food standards law?
If that's the case — and I speculate completely here — I would have thought that the "something" that the company gets is the ability to sell the product; the trade off is that, in exchange for the ability to sell the product, the company is required to provide a bare minimum of information about its content, so that potential purchasers can make informed deci
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
its the amount part which makes no damned sense to me
Again pure speculation on my part, but it seems to be down to informed choice — I'd have thought consumers would want to know if their sausages are 99% meat or 10% meat, and whether their fruit juice contains a mostly water, a lot of sugar and a mere hint of apple, or is actually pure pressed apple.
To argue with myself, even if that were the case, arguably it is something the market could regulate itself — if a consumer were sufficiently unsure, they would not buy, and companies with high per
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
carbonated water, high fructose corn syrup, caramel color (man does it annoy me having to put the American spelling for colour down here), phosphoric acid, natural flavors (aaaaggghhhh), caffeine.
I don't think they're being forced to give out all that much information.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
That's exactly why they work so hard to keep it secret.
There is no copyright on it.
of course, they can put a heavy clause in anyone's contract before they get to see it.
Brewers don't sue over recipes (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
You would be surprised of just how different taste beers can have. And getting the right recipe is not an easy feat, it takes many brews before you have something drinkable. Just a different strain of yeast can affect the taste to a large degree. If you start mixing in other ingredients than malt, yeast, water and hops it becomes n hard.
Re: (Score:3)
How many variations?
Is it an ale or a lager? Since you said piss we can assume you are a lager drinker. Is it filtered or not? Again you said piss so filtered. What kind of hops and how are they used? You said piss so we are going with extract and added after the boil. Are we using adjuncts or not? You said piss, so most of the grainbill will be rice and corn.
You have made budweiser, hope you are happy. If you want a beer that tastes like something stop buying beer that looks like piss.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
I'll save you the trouble. Piss is Australian for beer, so is Fosters (piss that is).
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Depending on your point of view...? (Score:2)
Can't it be both?
Re:Depending on your point of view...? (Score:5, Funny)
Can't it be both?
Quantum beer — my favourite!
Re: (Score:2)
My favourite beer is Schroedinger's beer.
Re:Depending on your point of view...? (Score:5, Funny)
I suspect it is also not your favorite beer.
Re: (Score:2)
Can't it be both?
Yeap... my thoughts exactly... like in "copyright junkies, with their all-rights-reserved habit, opening the gateway to dangerously addictive world of open source and free culture"... right? Right!!!
(where was I?...Oy, pot heat... pass on that spliff, will yea?)
Re: (Score:2)
It's a -NC license, so it can be at most gratis, not free.
Eh... (Score:5, Interesting)
CC 'non-commercial' strikes me as actually overwhelmingly different, in terms of objectives and in terms of the interactions being planned for(or against) than the more software-focused GPL/LGPL/BSD/MIT crowd:
With the software-focused licenses, the thinking(regardless of which camp you fall into on the questions of which interests you value most highly) is really about the relationship between the original developer, intermediate bundlers/distributors, and end users. Some licenses(ie. BSD) prefer to impose basically no restrictions beyond attribution on the intermediate users, considering it sufficient that the original developer can do what they want, and the end user(while they may or may not have any access to the guts of whatever binaries they get from the intermediate bundlers) does have access to the original project. LGPL is more aggressive about protecting the interests of the original project; by requiring intermediate distributors of works that include the original to make their changes available; but doesn't go much further than BSD in terms of watching over the end user. GPL explicitly demands that the end user's interest in access to the code be preserved, and the AGPL and GPL3 address the same interests in the context of 'cloud' and 'tivoized' scenarios.
However, across all of that, 'commercial/noncommercial' isn't an area of distinction. Obviously, these licenses have an effect on the viability of certain commercial schemes; but they have no explicit objectives in that area: If you can find a way to make money by selling software that is available in source form under the GPL3, rock on. If your freedom to add whatever proprietary features to FreeBSD can't save you from being crushed by generic upstream FreeBSD, sucks to be you.
By contrast, the whole idea of 'commercial' vs. 'noncommercial' reflects an explicit focus on matters that the software focused licenses leave implicit or simply consider an irrelevant detail to be worked out by what people can actually manage to succeed or fail at making money on. The closest analog, perhaps, is the bit in GPL compliance where it applies only if you distribute, not if you use internally. "Commercial/noncommercial" is a sort of much broader extension of that, positing that there is a 'noncommercial' area of culture-as-something-that-people-do that is separate from, and not merely a 'cottage industry' scaled version of the 'commercial' culture-as-something-that-media-industries-do, which is a monetary phenomenon and distinct both in degree and in kind from the noncommercial flavor.
In the context of software, I have to admit that I like the conceptual frameworks of the software-oriented licenses much better. This isn't to say that software cannot be a cultural thing; but most software is tools, complex tools, and it seems both appropriate and pragmatic to think about tools in terms of "How can we get good tools?" and "How can we ensure that our labor in producing tools ends up putting tools in the hands we want them to end up in?" OSS/FOSS licensing is a rather novel technique, born of the peculiar economics of software, for answering these questions; but it's actually a fairly conservative conceptual framework.
If anything, the 'Commercial'/'Noncommercial' framework is much more radical: The implicit assertion that there are areas of cultural output that are simply not amenable to resolution along the lines of market commerce(while certainly supportable, if Team Anthropologist fancies a trip back from the tribal regions to inform us that people who don't even have currency somehow manage to have music...); but it isn't necessarily something that would be a natural fit in ye olde contemporary consumer capitalist economies of the early 21st century... By contrast, CC-sharealike, CC-attribution, and similar are practically analogous to the software-oriented concepts, just written to cover non-software more cleanly, in that they don't posit this commercial/noncommercial distinction; but are more focused on either the GPL-style protection of the downstream user and the upstream developer, or the BSD style protection of attribution without significant interference in the distribution process.
Re: (Score:2)
I think it's more targeted. Noncommerical is targeted to end-users, not targeted at an organization to repackage and then sell to end-users. If someone wants to sell it, they have to ask the copyright owner. A lot of software is the same and gets around this problem by selling support for the "free" software.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
However, across all of that, 'commercial/noncommercial' isn't an area of distinction.
...
If you can find a way to make money by selling software that is available in source form under the GPL3, rock on.
In the case of software, commercial users - and re-sellers - will usually want some sort of guaranteed support if they're going to build a commercial product or service around somebody's open source project - or even use it in a business-critical role. In a sense, the commercial/noncommercial distinction sorts itself out: commercial users have an incentive to go back to the author. Third-parties selling support are, arguably, doing just that, selling support rather than re-selling the software. There is
Re: (Score:2)
All rights reserved doesn't prevent you from posting your story online and letting everyone read it. NoCom
Re: (Score:2)
I think most artists (and publishers) in any medium would disagree with your analysis of CC-NC-ND: there's a dramatic difference between just giving you a free copy, and also giving you perpetual rights to give other people free copies. Not to mention giving the same rights to everyone downstream. I'm sure librarians appreciate the distinction at least as much as well, basically you're saying that as long as at least one copy of the work exists it can be freely copied among fans, regardless of the state o
Re: (Score:2)
0- Use
1- Studdy and modify
2- Redistribute and share
3- Redistribute modified copies
In the case of non-commercial clause, you loose freedom 2 and 3. In Debian, we all agree to the DFSG: Debian Free Software Guidelines: http://www.debian.org/social_contract [debian.org] which clearly specify that we shouldn't "Discrimination Against Persons or Groups". Such lice
Re: (Score:2)
I think that comes down to a philisophical distinction - you don't lose freedoms 2 and 3, you simply have them restricted to non-commercial redistribution. That does make it incompatible with the GPL, but it doesn't make it "non-free" any more than the GPL's restriction against being incorporated into proprietary products.
Information freedom covers a lot of ground over a multi-dimensional spectrum - the endpoints are fixed at full public domain (maximally free) and all rights reserved in perpetuity (minima
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
My point is that calling other positions "non-free" is inherently derogatory and, since your position is itself less free than many others, hypocritical. The various versions of the CC family of licenses may be less free, more free, or both simultaneously in different respects, but since you do not occupy a maximally-free position, and none of them occupy a minimally-free position, you cannot call any of them non-free while maintaining intellectual honesty - you need to insert a qualifier in there (non-De
Re: (Score:2)
"Yeastie Boys" (Score:2)
is a rip off of the American band "Beastie Boys" and does irreparable damage to the band by associating it with a New Zealand beer.
The band's lawyers have been notified and this craft brew will be sued into oblivion.
Now that we got that over with... what's the topic of this discussion?
Money Causes Tunnel Vision (Score:2)
Pretentiousness^100! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Stone has been bottling pretentiousness all along. It works well if you include it with really excellent beer.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Found the stone 18th anniversary IPA yet? nom nom
Re: (Score:2)
Apparently nobody's had any 18th Anniversary: http://www.ratebeer.com/brewers/stone-brewing-co/76/
However, as the 16th anniversary only appeared a month ago, perhaps that was a typo: http://www.ratebeer.com/beer/stone-16th-anniversary-ipa/182049/1/25/
The chances of it reaching Estonia are slim. It might hit Utobeer in London, for example, and I try to go there at least once a year. Perhaps bierkompass.de will get it too, who knows? I'll lo
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Sure it does. Open source can mean nothing more than the source (in this case the recipe) is available. The whole Free Software definition of open source isn't the only valid one, or even the first.
On a side note, given that recipes can't be protected by copyright, I have to wonder if they can even enforce a non-commercial clause in the license. Seems anyone could recreate the beer from the recipe and sell it if they saw fit.
Google should patent this idea . . . (Score:2)
Free beer, served over a Internet "series of tubes". They could make money by selling information about what and how much you drink to anyone interested.
Like, the police, for example.
What's noncommercial? (Score:2)
While the intention of the CC licences may have been to encourage reuse by standardization, I find that in many areas, it's still quite murky.
For one, what's non-commercial? The FAQ [creativecommons.org] doesn't quite say, other than to point you to a survey [creativecommons.org] of what some people think non-commercial means, which is all over the map. If you've got a picture, and you merely reprint it, is that non-commercial? If you have ads on a page? If you're a non-profit? A non-profit selling (selling=dollars) tickets for a concert using an NC
A Beer is Not the Recipe! (Score:2)
This is silly (Score:2)
The "recipe" for beer is hardly proprietary (Score:2)
I'm more of a cider man, and the recipe there's even simpler: chuck a ton of rotten apples in a barrel, add a couple of rats, then strain off the liquid when it starts bubbling. Something like that anyway.
What? (Score:1)
This is stupid (Score:1)
Update - Digital IPA is now CC-BY-SA (Score:1)