"Open Source" Not Trademarked After All? 160
Mike_Miller writes "According to a ZDNet Article, the term "Open Source" is not, and never has been,
trademarked. Quote: "The term has never been a registered trademark, and it's
no longer even pending registration."
" Oh dear. Update: 06/15 02:30 by CT : ESR wrote in to say "Hey, chill, everybody. OSI was planning to issue a statement about
this matter after our Wednesday board meeting (despite some of the
rumors going around, we do operate by consensus; this slows us down a
bit sometimes). So if you'll wait a bit, all will be made clear.
In the mean time: don't panic!"
Open Source (!TM) (Score:1)
Doesn't someone unfailingly bring this point up every time Perens and Raymond have a love tiff? Doesn't everyone here invariably then agree that this is the case? Haven't we repeatedly said that the term is much too generic to be trademarkable? It's like trademarking the term shoe. Can I get through this post with a bold word in every sentence? Inquiring minds want to know.
Re:Copyrights a la Object-Orientation (Score:1)
And don't go bringing OOP garbage into this. It's a little less than relevant. Hell, look at 'AT&T', or '3M'. I'm assuming knowledge of those acronyms. Hardlly a hint of 'je ne sais quoi' in there. No, the term Open Source doesn't refer to specifics in software. It refers to a way of doing business. It may very well be the mark of someone's trade. And it is therefore trademarkable.
And please don't give me this 'close your eyes... if you can't imagine its physical manifestation then it can't be trademarked.' business. A trademark is a trade mark. Simple as that.
Regards,
--
PS> Everything you ever write is copyrighted as soon as you hit the paper. All you have to do is say so.
Re:Newsflash: Open Source is still a trademark (Score:1)
All you have to do is claim copyright to have the copyright. I know a few programmers that actually print their source, mail it to themselves, and save the sealed envelope with the postmark on it to insure the date of the copyright as well. (paranoid group, but rightfully so)
Erik
Check this hurl for trademark info (Score:2)
http://www.wld.com/conbus/weal/wtradmk1.htm
He says now it's free, but... (Score:3)
Old news. (Score:1)
Re:Any response from Perens, Raymond? (Score:1)
Re:Any response from Perens, Raymond? (Score:1)
Lots of people say we don't need commercial support, and I totally disagree with them. We certainly need all the support we can get no matter where it comes from. On the other hand, we don't need Evan Leibovitch or his kind or their snotty attitude and general contempt for all things which do not line their pockets.
Why "oh dear"? (Score:1)
How is this different than yesterday, when "open source" wasn't trademarked, we all knew it wasn't trademarked, but that fact hadn't been published?
Are we worried about Microsoft stealing the term? Gosh, too bad. We'd have to go back to what we really mean: Free Software.
You see, the issue isn't over whether I can read the source code (or rather, that's not the full issue). The biggest issue is whether I can do whatever I want with it. "Open" doesn't describe this condition very well, which is how we got saddled with so many "read-only" licenses.
I'd go on, but I'm sure some brain-dead moderator already thinks this post is offtopic, a troll or flamebait...
--
"Please remember that how you say something is often more important than what you say." - Rob Malda
Yeah, well, BSD ISN'T necessarily free... (Score:1)
It's perfectly legal for Company X to provide me with BSD binaries with no source code. The license does nothing to prevent this. Therefore my copy of BSD may not be free.
Linux providers, OTOH, are required to provide source code under the GPL, which guarantees the freedom of the software I get.
--
"Please remember that how you say something is often more important than what you say." - Rob Malda
Eggs, sausage, baked beans and (Score:1)
SPAM!
Lemon curry?
--
"Please remember that how you say something is often more important than what you say." - Rob Malda
CareWare? (Score:1)
CareBearWare?
NoSnareWare?
StarWare?
JediWare?
ForceWare?
--
"Please remember that how you say something is often more important than what you say." - Rob Malda
Basic Intellectual Property Law (Score:1)
Descriptive combinations of words such as "Open Source" are too widely used at this point for someone such as MacroHard to snap them up. Once a phrase is used by a large group in an industry it is not available for register by any individual entity. Basic intellectual property law covers this so no one needs to worry.
Not forgetting anything... (Score:1)
"Their choice. That's freedom."
Yes, but only for them.
Think about the Old South. Wealthy slave-owners owners were perfectly free to sell, beat, kill, etc slaves. Was there freedom in the Old South? No.
Same here. BSD affords freedom to a minority, but at the potential expense of the majority. The GPL puts minor restrictions on the minority (must republish mods if binaries are distributed) so that the majority can retain their freedom (access to source code and ability to modify/redistribute).
As for getting the source elsewhere: Not for long, maybe. After several years of secret improvement by Company X, I'd hate to start over with the base BSD code and reverse-engineer everything thing Company X did.
--
"Please remember that how you say something is often more important than what you say." - Rob Malda
Re:Not forgetting anything... (Score:1)
So not releasing source equates with beating and killing slaves? This dosn't even need an answer.
Where did I say that? Go find a dictionary and look up "analogy". For instance: A is to B as C is to D. That does not make A the same as C, it means the relationship is the same.
Why do you feel that you have the right to use other peoples work?
Again, your words in my mouth. I'm not forcing nor do I want anyone else to force Company X to use License Y.
What I am saying, is that if Company X takes already existing source code under Open License Y and re-releases it under Closed License Z, that I, the consumer, and you, the programmer, have both been screwed. This is because Company X, by putting additional restrictions on existing code has reduced the "amount of freedom in the world".
The GPL prevents this, BSD does not.
--
"Please remember that how you say something is often more important than what you say." - Rob Malda
Let's do this step by step (Score:1)
Step 1: Group of Programmers G creates Program P with Feature Set F and releases it under License L.
Step 2: Company C takes P, adds (f1, f2, f3,
Now, if L = GPL, then L1 = GPL and the source code to (f1, f2, f3,
If L = BSD, L1 can be anything at all, including a license that hides the source code to (f1, f2, f3,
At this point we would have a code fork. And not just any code fork, because source code for (f1, f2, f3,
And as time goes on this only gets worse unless someone is working their hump off to play catchup to Company C--and it is all duplicated effort. Incredibly stupid.
Why not just use the GPL to ensure fair play by all? Sure, having a referee on the baseball diamond takes a little freedom away--but only the freedom to cheat.
--
"Please remember that how you say something is often more important than what you say." - Rob Malda
Re:He says now it's free, but... (Score:1)
Funny you should bring that up, when there are other licenses -- Open Source (notm) licenses -- that let people take the code, and do with it as they will.
The X/MIT license, for instance, may as well be public domain for all the restrictions it puts on you; the BSD license is only barely moreso. Yet, even though there are proprietary versions of most any BSD software you care to name (in fact, OS/2 [ibm.com] has a lot of the networking stuff as far as I can tell), it's still largely free software.
To put it another way, the free software community is strong enough that it doesn't need the GPL, or trademarks, to keep its intellectual property largely in the open.
There are versions of Apache that are proprietary, as I recall. But that's not where most of the technology, or even code, is. There is plenty of code based on the X sources that's out there, and proprietary -- but really, how far ahead of XFree86 are these other X Window Systems?
There are, in my opinion, exceptions to this seeming rule. I think there are programs that should be protected by the GPL, such as the Linux kernel, or the GIMP. But not all of it.
Re:Not so bad. (Score:1)
No, it's trademarks. (Kleenex, Xerox, etc.) Trademarks last forever if protected, it's only through failure to protect that they can be lost. (This has led to some annoying abuses of the trademark concept being used as a substitute for copyright. You can distribute the original Tarzan story, but you can't write new Tarzan stories, for example.)
While open source might be trademarkable, it would be extremely hard to protect, simply because it is so widely used already.
I'd almost suggest "gnuware" as an alternate term, but I suspect X and BSD license users would object based on the implied GPL bias.
Yeah, so what (Score:2)
will try to trademark the term, but guess what:
1. Microsoft has already much overused similar
terms like "open API" and "open interface"
throughout their literature and it has not been
a problem of being confused with Open Source.
2. Microsoft, for the time being, seems to frown
on Open Source and would rather not have their
products be misconstrued as Open Source -- at
least until their PR people wake up and realize
that Open Source is a good term to be associated
with, then you will see Microsoft using the
words "Open Source" on all packaging and product
literature.
3. Microsoft could care less who owns
the legal trademark on any word or phrase
-- if they want to
use the term Open Source they will anyway and
anyday -- what are you going to do about it?
Sue them? Take them to court? If the DOJ can't
stop Microsoft from doing whatever it feels
like then who can?
Defining the terminology... here's what I posted. (Score:1)
In a perfect world, a 17" monitor would be SEVENTEEN inches on the diagonal, a 56K modem could transfer 7KB/s, a Java applet would run on all platforms with any Java Virtual Machine, a 300Mhz processor wouldn't have a performance rating, but would actually run at 300 million cycles/second, etc., etc.
Standards *need* strict definitions to protect them from marketing. In my mind, Open Source doesn't mean "free", or "I get to see some source code", it means compatible with the DFSG--the Debian Free Software Guidelines. That interpretation is a strict interpretation on what Open or free means. It doesn't mean certified by the Open Consortium, or it's freeware. In fact, if it didn't sound so stupid, I'd suggest replacing the term 'Open Source' with DFSG-compatible, because it gets across the meaning.
...but here I am foiled yet again by the forces of marketing and hype, which you so clearly represent. I guess I'd be happy enough if we just had an RFC defining what Open Source is. (I haven't read them all, so maybe we do...
"open source" prior usage (Score:1)
Can anyone point to some writen document, using the phrase "Open Source", dating from before the O'Reilly open source workshop?
Re:GNU and `Free' (Score:1)
> a function to it.
The GPL ensures that you _can_ add this function. The right to enhance and redistribute the software you use is (to rms) a fundemental freedom, just like free speech. That is the freedom that the GPL protects.
You are also allowed to take money for the function (thus, no free beer). You just can't deny other the same freedom you yourself received.
Re:If you limit use, it's not free at all. (Score:1)
Those who don't want to be part of the community in which GPLed software is shared don't have to. The community gives freedom to those who don't want to deny others the same freedom.
Btw, I am not allowed to kill someone else either and even though that might reduce my 'freedom' I think it is perfectly acceptable limitation. I am not allowed to make GPLed software non-free and that is also an acceptable limitation.
Just like you can't expect to get the benefits of society without paying or in some other way give back to society you shouldn't expect to be able to take GPLed software and use in your proprieraty products. GPLed software is the currency that is used in the GPL community.
"Flash-in-the-pan" popularity? You just can't get over that Linux might be more successful than the various BSD variants, eh? Heck, what if the reason for this is partly due to the GPL? Looks like jealousy to me.
Re:Actually, it is trademarked, although pending (Score:1)
Re:Why "oh dear"? (Score:1)
Open has been around for years... (Score:1)
I subscribed to Open Systems Journal for years, yet it had nothing to do with Linux or GNU.
The Open Software Foundation created their own version of Unix and had nothing to do with Linux or GNU.
Open means you have published the specs on how to interface with your hardware/software. I suppose by extention Open Source means you've published the source.
And if Microsoft wants to call something Open API, then they are using the term correctly... as it has been defined by the computer industry.
That's what made this so ludicrous. ESR comes along in 1998 to define a term that has been in use since at least 1990. Sheesh.
Re:Any response from Perens, Raymond? (Score:1)
If someone tried to trademark it now pretty much anybody could pull out a copy of Infoworld dating back to last year and say "What are you talking about?"
I don't care! (Score:1)
about "Open Source" and whether or not there is
a trademark to "hopefully" be defended by
someone. If they don't defend it as we think
they should, then it is worthless to us anyway.
The true meaning has, and always will be, defined
as RMS has defined it.
I'm not sure you can define one term to mean
what is meant. It would seem that no matter
what you do to define a term, everyone will still
define it as whatever they want. You will need
to use multiple terms and/or words to completely
define the meaning you wish to convey.
Who cares if "Open Source" isn't a trademark, what
would that mean anyway? We define what it means
by the license we apply to our software.
Derry Bryson
Re:Yeah, so what (Score:2)
When you have money, you have power, and you are the law. Bow before Mr. Gates and repent.
Re:Is this a problem? (Score:1)
--
Aaron Gaudio
"The fool finds ignorance all around him.
Re:difficult idea to sum up in one or two words (Score:1)
The only change I see coming out of this is an end to all the bickering between SPI and OSI and the elimination of rogue organization (such as the OSI, rogue not because they are bad, but more because they broke from SPI and for a long time at least were controlled by two charaters) gaining control of the term "Open Source".
If an institution chooses software because it has a buzzword of Open Source but isn't, then they get what they deserve for not fully understanding the buzzword.
--
Aaron Gaudio
"The fool finds ignorance all around him.
Re:difficult idea to sum up in one or two words (Score:1)
What's wrong with open source? Now that we don't have to worry about OSI controlling the term, it merely becomes a subjective term. BTW, all these alternatives are more alternatives to "Free Software" than "Open Source" (following the OSI guidelines).
The only change I see coming out of this is an end to all the bickering between SPI and OSI and the elimination of rogue organization (such as the OSI, rogue not because they are bad, but more because they broke from SPI and for a long time at least were controlled by two charaters) gaining control of the term "Open Source".
If an institution chooses software because it has a buzzword of Open Source but isn't, then they get what they deserve for not fully understanding the buzzword.
--
Aaron Gaudio
"The fool finds ignorance all around him.
Re:Why "oh dear"? (Score:1)
--
Aaron Gaudio
"The fool finds ignorance all around him.
Re:Actually, it is trademarked, although pending (Score:3)
It returns:
If you require additional information about the application status, contact the Trademark Assistance Center (703) 308-9000 (M-F 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. EST). You could also contact SOPHIA S. KIM, Trademark Examining Attorney. Click here to find out the examiner's phone number.
Serial Number: 75439502
Registration Number: (NOT AVAILABLE)
Current Status: Abandoned: Applicant failed to respond to an Office action.
Date of Status: MAY 24,1999
Re:I just spammed ....damn (Score:2)
Bruce
Re:On being a fanatic. (Score:2)
However, if OSI has let this drop, it must be deliberate. They still have a trademark, just not a registered one. They can still re-apply.
Geez, you sure give us a hard time for being the ones with the nerve to stick our necks out and do something. Want to try a mile in my moccasins, Kemosabe?
Bruce
Re:Certification Mark != Trademark (Score:2)
Bruce
Re:'Take my job, please.' (Score:2)
OK, I read my own response. I walked off of OSI's board because I couldn't stand behind Eric any longer. The overriding of a board vote, the constant deprecation of Stallman, etc. I don't regret that decision.
But fold up my tents? What gave you that idea?
Bruce
Re:Certification Mark != Trademark (Score:2)
The closest equivalent is the "Union Label", the garment workers union certification mark. They license it for the manufacturers to use, they do not use it in commerce themselves.
Did you say you were an attorney? Not an IP one, are you?
Bruce
Re:Certification Mark != Trademark (Score:2)
Thanks
Bruce
Re:Any response from Perens, Raymond? (Score:2)
Bruce
Re:If you limit use, it's not free at all. (Score:2)
The GPL restricts your right to take away other people's rights. It's better that everyone be allowed to modify the program than just you, and nobody after you.
Freedom includes responsibility. The GPL mandates that you behave responsibly regarding other people's freedoms.
Thanks
Bruce
It's still a trademark, registered or not (Score:3)
I don't know why OSI elected to drop the ball on registration. When last they corresponded with me, they had an attorney working on it. I sent the registration papers to Nils Lohner at SPI quite a while ago, and he would have forwarded them to OSI.
Evan is so darned malicious.
Bruce
It's still in the USPTO database (Score:3)
Bruce
Re:Any response from Perens, Raymond? (Score:3)
However, I had heard a while back that OSI had failed to respond to an office action, though I don't understand why they'd do that it was undoubtably deliberate.
I wish Evan wouldn't sound so malicious. Doesn't he understand that a trademark is the best protection against someone else registering a trademark on the same thing?
Bruce Perens
The Open Source Definition is more important! (Score:3)
There's been some question regarding the legal status of the Open Source certification mark. Although the mark still exists, its application for federal registration has apparently been allowed to lapse, perhaps temporarily. In February, I published It's Time To Talk About Free Software Again [perens.com] , because I felt that the use of the phrase Open Source had caused us to think less about the freedom involved in Free Software. What I said then still stands, and thus I'm ambivalent about the fate of the Open Source certification mark. However, the Open Source Definition is still a good idea. That document has been a very important standard: it's helped us distinguish between licenses that provide a fair return to the free software community for the effort our developers contribute, and those that don't. Many large corporations and individual developers have been influenced to use better licenses because the community insisted that they be OSD-Compliant, and that's helped free software prosper.
Now more than ever, as Free Software finally becomes commercialized, as $100 Million dollar IPOs draw the greedy as well as those who would treat us fairly, it's important that the free software community continue to insist on licenses that comply with the OSD. Our stand on licensing during the next year will make the difference between life and death for free software. Either we maintain the quid-pro-quo, or the developers who have made free software great will leave in disillusionment. Without the fair return to the free software community that the OSD stipulates, we'll be left with will be shareware-with-source, when we can get source at all.
I wrote the OSD with the help of the Debian [debian.org] developers, and it still exists as the Debian Free Software Guidelines [debian.org]. None of the presently-announced Open Source Initiative board members were involved. This isn't to imply anything negative about them, it's just to point out that they aren't essential to the preservation of the OSD. Regardless of what happens with the Open Source trademark and the Open Source Initiative, the author of the OSD and many other members of the free software community will continue to stand behind the Open Source Definition. We will insist on software with OSD-compliant licensing, and we won't donate our efforts to anything else. I hope you'll do the same.
Since there are a lot of newcomers to our community, I guess some of you might not have encountered the Open Source Definition. You can read an extended analysis of the OSD, with commentary, at this link [perens.com].
Thanks
Bruce Perens
Re:How about "libreware?" (Score:1)
---
"'Is not a quine' is not a quine" is a quine.
How about "libreware?" (Score:1)
Libreware carries the connotation of "free" without its unfortunate ambiguity. No compromising of principles (as in "Open Source") and no room for misinterpretation (as in "Free Software").
It even strikes me as being palatable to the "right" (i.e. the corporate world) in a way that "liberated" could never hope to be.
How about 'Freedomware' (Score:1)
Alex
A grain of salt? (Score:4)
Currency of the Web Database
Re:Better term... (Score:1)
I kinda like that, myself. Here's a vote (not that anyone's voting...) for this new moniker.
--
A host is a host from coast to coast...
Re:Yeah, well, BSD ISN'T necessarily free... (Score:1)
You've just done a wonderful job of illustrating why we need better terms for describing the two concepts. In Comment 61 [slashdot.org], Arandir [slashdot.org] suggested the term "Community Software" for the concept of "free with source." (unless I misunderstood, in which case my apologies to Arandir...) I like it.
--
A host is a host from coast to coast...
Suits me fine... (Score:2)
What we really need is to come up with a rating system, something like the "Geek Code" but not so deliberately overcomplicated, that classifies software according to a few key points of its licensing terms.
Stallman does not think Free == GPL (Score:1)
Please, people, check your facts before characterizing other people's positions (especially rms's--many people seem to criticize him based on little more than hearsay).
Re:Yeah, well, BSD ISN'T necessarily free... (Score:1)
Well, `free of charge' means `lacking payment' (`free of XXX': `not restrained by XXX'), but just `free' (period) means `not restrained' (period)--it's nons-specific.
`free software' doesn't mean `software, gratis', but `software, unbound'.
On being a fanatic. (Score:2)
They say things, and their followers believe them. They do things, and their followers support them.
OpenSource crusaders, seem to have chosen Bruce Perens and Eric Raymond as their leaders.
All this time, people have generally believed in what they've said about the supposed trademark, and generally supported their actions in defending it.
Now it turns out, these two fellows who've been leading your crusade and protecting your slogan, were a lot more talk than action.
How is it that a couple guys can spend so much time pontificating about their applied-for trademark and never bother to actually verify that they've got a valid, registered trademark?
It's good for people to believe strongly in things. There are a lot of important things out there to care about. Some people, unfortunately, take it too far.
Some times, some people get to the point where caring and believing in something surpasses the need to occasionally commune with reality. This is how we end up with Waco Tx, pseudo-islamic terrorism, you get the picture.
Perens and Raymond are as fanatical about free software as the day is long. It's a good cause, I won't deny that. The concept of licensing intelectual property threatens to do society a great deal of damage. It has already to some extent, but nowhere near what it's capable of. We're just getting started, to tell the truth.
I'm not here to call names. It's easy when people listen to what you say to find yourself believing too much in what you tell them.
When you accept or reject without thought, you do your leader a disservice. There are situations where it is appropriate, but this is not a life or death situation.
True collaboration is a matter of maximizing the potential of a group. If both of us agree, one of us is not necessary. Outside of close friends, family members, children, and spouses, you aren't doing anybody any favors by giving them your unquestioning devotion.
So consider this carefully. I don't think it's appropriate to point a finger at someone else until you've considered whether you should be pointing it at yourself.
Metrics of "openess" of licenses (Score:1)
E.g. on a scale of 0 to 9, the GPL might fall have an "f" value of 7 and a "p" value of 8, while the BSD license would perhaps have an "f" value of 8, but a "p" value that is much lower. Public domain software would have an "f" value of 9, and a "p" value of 0. (Proprietary licenses would presumably have an "f" value of 0, but a "p" value of 9.) No idea how one would actually go about quantifying such things, or how to do so in an "open" manner (as opposed to, say, just appointing a committee we're all supposed to trust to do this). Whatever the solution, it seems some kind of measurable metric that has a little more precision than "so-and-so has said it meets the Open Source definition" is IMHO really needed, though.
A third metric comes to mind -- how compatible is the license with other open licenses. I.e. how much would using a particular piece of code "pollute" the rest of the code? How would one best define and measure this "c" factor?
Re:How about "libreware?" (Score:1)
What is it with Americans? How did "liberal"
become an antonym to "capitalist"? Liberals
are, pretty much, all capitalists. Ever heard of
"liberal capitalism"? Capitalism is a taxon of
a different order; it is in contrast to
terms such as communism and anarchism, not
liberalism.
I suggest you waste less time on slashdot
and get yourself an education.
Pondering thy navel lint (Score:1)
GNU and `Free' (Score:1)
I don't really understand why people claim that GNU software is `free' as in `free speech,' rather than `free beer.' To me it seems quite the opposite.
Let's say I acquire a GPL'd program and add a function to it. If I had the powers of free speech, I could utter this function in any way I wanted, source or binary, to anyone. But I can't; I must not give someone else a compiled copy of that function along with source and binaries for the rest of the GNU software. Thus, my free speech is compromised in that I cannot say some things I've written in the way I want to say them.
On the other hand, the GPL does ensure that you can always get a copy of the source for a program, and any extensions, fixes or changes anybody wants to distribute, without paying any money for it (except perhaps a nominal sum to cover distribution costs). Thus, `free beer.'
cjs
Re:GNU and `Free' (Score:1)
cjs
Re:Copyrights a la Object-Orientation (Score:2)
While many people may not like that kind of license (and I prefer "free software" in the GNU sense myself as well), it would still have served a useful function at that.
However, by now, the term may indeed have become too generic, since it has rarely been claimed to be a trademark when used. Maybe GNU at least should learn a lesson from that and think about claiming a trademark on "GNU", "GPL", and "LGPL", as well as their long forms.
Without trademark protection, anybody can release something under the "GNU Public License", and you may assume that you are getting the usual "GPL", but it may contain unexpected clauses. Getting trademark protection doesn't require registering, it merely requires using "TM" fairly consistently.
loss of trademark is a loss for us all (Score:4)
Trademarks ensure that people get what they think they get, and that's a very good thing in a market where companies benefit enormously from using the latest public-relations-friendly buzzwords.
Of course, there is always the risk that a trademark isn't administered well. But a well-administered trademark on the term "open source" could have ensured that people have a clear understanding of what they get and what they don't get when, say, Apple claims that their release is "open source". It could also have encouraged companies to go the extra mile to make their releases "open source" compliant, rather than having each company's lawyers make things up as they go along.
While a few years ago, the term "open source" was novel enough, I fear it may be too late to rescue the term "open source" as a trademark. And that's a big lost opportunity to anybody interested in open source.
Re:Not so bad. (Score:1)
Now onto your two points:
1) Who cares? "Open Source" is two commonly used english words. First off the trademark would never be granted. Second, it wouldn't hold up in court. Third, who cares? People will still keep using the phrase no matter what the backwards US legal system says.
2) People already are abusing the term. Al Gore described his damned website as "open source." Microsoft claimed that licensing the winNT source code to universities was "open source." Hey, my mouse is "open source" (it's just as legitimate in this sentence as it is in the others).
Newsflash: Open Source is still a trademark (Score:1)
Yes it is.... (Score:1)
Here's a quote from SPI:
"The Open Source trademark is managed by Eric Raymond on behalf of the free software community. "
That's taken from the "trademarks" section of their web site.
The need for a trademark (Score:1)
There seems to be a mistaken assumption in the article, that "open source" is a term just waiting to be snapped up by profiteering companies and whored to uneducated consumers. This is patently wrong.
The fact is, the term "open source" has very few connotations in the mind of the consumers that translate into positive market value. People may look upon it as cool, even courageous, but that's before they go to the store. Business executives still, to a large extent, view "open source" as being synonymous with "hackerware" and "unsupported". Companies that go open source (in name) are either dedicated solely to the Open Source community for a demographic (e.g. RedHat) or are quick to skip over the term when going after corporate customers. This isn't because they are trying to hide from the Knights Errant of Free Software. They just don't need the term as anything more descriptive than an advertising ploy.
Is it really the duty of the Free Software Movement to regulate the term? I don't think so. After all, the same people that are going to continue to be influenced by a company being Open source (us) are the same people who can recognize a fraud at twenty paces. "Open Source" might not be trademarked, but "BSD" and "GNU" are, and when strange new licenses start cropping up, we will take note.
When it's all said and done, is the loss of the trademark really a bad thing? I think a much more important concept, although maybe not completely independent, is maintaining the purity of the Movement. That doesn't mean that companies have to obey strict guidelines in order to release their source and get recognition for it; if anything, that would simply scare those companies away. It just means that the people already committed to the movement need to remain productive.
Re:Details? (Score:1)
Re:Yeah, well, BSD ISN'T necessarily free... (Score:1)
Not so bad. (Score:1)
There are two problems with this.
1) MS, or someone evil, will register the trademark and make things difficult for Open Sources. They have the resources, but I hardly think it would be worth their while, given the difficulty of reclaiming "Open Source" from the violent and chaotic sea that washes upon it.
2) Someone will abuse the term. Possible, even likely, but I think it is better to mobilize grass roots to deal with these than to have an organization that owns the trademark and arbitrates what is or isn't open source.
Is this a problem? (Score:1)
Can the term Open Source still be trademarked? (Score:2)
Or would the fact that the SPI/Perns/Raymond application lapsed make all of the existing "open source" projects prior art to any new applicant, and thus place the term in the public domain.
Thoughts, anyone?
Re:Hello lawyers... (Score:1)
Wicked Werdna, what's your opinion?
Re:Kostenlos Software (Score:1)
Mike
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3rd vote for "Community Software" (Score:1)
(CommunityWare...? Naah!)
--
- Sean
Correct Usage (Score:1)
Hmm... the same way it's obvious to most people when the word "hacker" is used incorrectly...?
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- Sean
I see what you mean. (Score:1)
Note the last 10 words, boys and girls: "during which the term's association with that product is exclusive."
Kinda hard for anyone to trademark "Open Source" as things stand... there you go, from a (more-or-less) definitive source!
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- Sean
Pure BS. No trademark can exist for "Open Source." (Score:1)
Check it out:
http://www.wld.com/conbus/weal/wtradmk1
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- Sean
No, they're not. (Score:1)
They can't, and neither can anyone else. Here's why:
http://www.wld.com/conbus/weal/wtradmk1
Pay special attention to Paragraph 7 (the one that starts, "A descriptive term...")
--
- Sean
Re:this is a chance to do things right the first t (Score:1)
Or to put it politically: if my free speech is predicated on the free speech of others, then my right to distribute my software as I wish is predicated on the rights of other to distribute their as they wish. To say that non-free software is slavery is to say that speeches we don't agree with are slavery.
In a world with 100% software freedom (no copyright or intellectual property laws) everything would be in the public domain, software could be released without source code, and the GPL could not exist.
Re:Better term... (Score:2)
The problem with "open source software" is that is is easily confused with "open software" or with software whose source is available, but wholly proprietary (like MFC).
The problem with "free software" is that it tends to make people think "political freedom" and then to extrapolate non-existant political rights from it (and all the resultant political correctness).
'Take my job, please.' (Score:1)
Go and read your own response.
Re:difficult idea to sum up in one or two words (Score:1)
(gets taken away by the police)
Hello lawyers... (Score:1)
Re:difficult idea to sum up in one or two words (Score:1)
Kees B.
(Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Re:3rd vote for "Community Software" (Score:1)
Here's an thought. The idea here is to market free software to suits (since clueful folks can simply bother to learn how software licensing works
Maybe that's too abstract. Plus, OSS seems to have really exploded in the press recently, and has become a pretty well-known buzz word. Media-wise, we may be stuck with it, even if all trademark attempts (past and future) fall through.
Re:How about "libreware?" (Score:2)
Re:Copyrights a la Object-Orientation (Score:2)
Second, you can trademark "Dolby", even though it doesn't refer to an object, but a process or set of conventions.
Like "Dolby", "Open Source" is a process and set of conventions. Like the software it describes, it needs protection, so that no one can claim to be OS when they aren't.
Re:Copyrights a la Object-Orientation (Score:1)
And its a lousy metaphor - you should have used platonic forms or Jungian archetypes if you wanted to be pretentious and nearly accurate =)
Let's just hope that Al Gore doesn't register it. (Score:1)
or "information superhighway"
on second thought, he can have "information superhighway."
:)
Re:Yeah, well, BSD ISN'T necessarily free... (Score:1)
As long as software is covered under BSD it is Free(free == freedom, not beer) because you are relatively unrestricted as to what you can do with it, you can reverse engineer it if you don't get source, even to the exent that you can redistribute the code as a closed-source project. That is freedom.
GPL, restrict you. You must remain open source under the GPL, and you must use GPL. This isn't neccesarily bad, and BSD isn't neccesarily good, it all depends on your personal opinion.
Restriction == Not Free
Unrestricted == Free
Open Source == the source is open.... (restricted or not)
Thank you, have a nice day
"Fairware"? (Score:1)
WRONG! (Score:1)
GPL it! (Score:1)
"Open Source" shouldn't be trademarked, it should be GPL'd!
Then any changes or modifications that are made to it must be made in a public release. For example, "Open Sourced" would really be "Open Source" version 1.1. For the 2.0 version, we would have "Open Coded". A complete rewrite for version 3.0 could leave us with "Openly coded by thousands of happy programmers" and would leave room for modular based design. Then anyone could add the "who love their life" module (since it will be made freely and publicly available) to make "Openly coded by thousands of happy programmers who love their life." At this point, the boys in Redmond will compare the results of GPL'ing terms to ending up with product names like "Word" and "Works" (blah! boring!) they will have no choice but to submit to the superior ways of the GPL.
Seriously, to trademark "Open Source" would go against what it represents, IMHO. The term should be protected only by repeatedly using it correctly, hence making it obvious when it is used incorrectly.
Re:How about "libreware?" (Score:2)
Two things. First, "liberal" doesn't always mean politically liberal. Secondly, Linux is capitalist when it wants to be.
The term "liberal" isn't always dirty, and it isn't always the political left. Have you ever seen a conservative arts college? Ever borrow a book from a conservatory? "Liberal" is not always associated with "Left", "Democrat", or "Socialism".
Concerning capitalism, a lot of us Linux types are pretty capitalist when it comes to Linux. I would certainly suggest that someone like Bob Young is at least fairly capitalist.
Free software is free as in speech, not beer. You just can't charge for licensing, because you can only limit licensing in certain ways. While this is more liberal than the license fee business model, this is right in line with the business model common to most "hard goods". That is, if you sell me a car, I own it and can do whatever I please with it, no strings attached.
Linux is both community and capitalist. You won't make money in Linux by selling licenses. For a time, you can make money selling the CDs (until everybody has fast download capability). You can make money by being a Linux guru, by writing books, supporting and maintaining, and providing service. The model works because those gurus who make money on Linux will want to code for it (and often will in the course of their professional duties).
How capitalist is Linux? A lot of people are betting a lot of money that Linux can take market share away from Microsoft, the undisputed king of the license-fee business model, while that business model is in place. Red Hat thinks that they can make money without licensing fees in an environment with a very hostile, license-fee-fortified market leader, as competition.
If making money by serving the customer is liberal and anti-capitalist, then Linux businesses are liberal and anti-capitalist. I am not cynical enough to believe that this is the case. Free software produces profits with a nonstandard business model, and is willing to prove it in the capitalist arena.
Re:Open Source (!TM) (Score:1)
Apparantly you can't get throw this post with a bold word in every sentence.
Re:Suits me fine... (Score:1)
Sorry, but you're inventing a wheel.
-russ
Re:Newsflash: Open Source is still a trademark (Score:2)
If y'all take the time, you'll learn that trademarks don't need to be registered, and in fact cannot be registered until they've been in use and established. Actually, only a fraction of trademarks are registered. An ordinary, unregistered trademark is indicated by the little "TM" symbol, while a registered trademark is indicated by the "R in a circle".
IANAL, thank Heavens.
this is a chance to do things right the first time (Score:2)
Maybe now is the chance to chose a better name. Free Software advocates have long complained that there is no word in English to distinguish between free beer and free speech, although they note that such a difference exists in other language.
So why not borrow from another language? Maybe something like Libre Software (or Liberated Software even if that isnt seen as perjorative) could be used to really say what is meant. Of course this probably won't please everyone still, as I suspect that many who use the term "Open Source" really don't want to give users as much freedom as Free Software authors would.
Marv
Any response from Perens, Raymond? (Score:3)
Why the big soap opera much ado about nothing? Were these guys hiding the truth from us (that there was no Open Source trademark)? Or were they ignorant of the fact that the trademark expired? If the latter, then they're incompetent in legal matters and shouldn't be handling trademark issues at all.
Not that I'm flaming Raymond, Perens, et al, but this is really embarassing.
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