New SPDX mailing list created
I've created a new mailing list for SPDX which is public for everyone and for which public archives are available. I've subscribed everyone from the package-facts list to this new list.
The address is spdx@... Please update your mail programs to use this list in the future. The package-facts list is now deprecated.
-- Martin Michlmayr Open Source Program Office, Hewlett-Packard
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Linux Foundation launches license compliance effort | ZDNet
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Pretty printer binaries available
I uploaded the pretty printer java program to the source
auditor ftp server. It’s a secure web server, so I apologize in advance if it’s
a bit inconvenient to download.
The ftp server is at ftp.sourceauditor.com
You need to use explicit tls/ssl over port 21. Logon with user spdx and
password spdx1
The file SPDXPretty.zip contains the files mentioned in the
previous email (copied below).
Let me know if you need more information or if you have any
problems.
Gary
From:
package-facts-bounces@...
[mailto:package-facts-bounces@...] On Behalf Of Gary O'Neall
Sent: Sunday, August 08, 2010 11:32 PM
To: package-facts@...
Subject: Java Pretty Printer
I completed an “alpha” version of a Java based pretty
printer. It’s 10MB in binary form with its dependencies. Is there a
place on the Wiki I can upload this to? I tried to add it to a page as an
attachment to a new discussion page, but the .zip filetype was not
allowed. Please advise on the best method to get this to the group.
Attached is a modified zlib example (see notes below on what
items were changed) and an example output.
Below is some information and discussion points related to the
pretty printer development:
I’m sure there are a few improvements to be made before
calling this a “release”, but it does provide some formatting and works
for the zlib example. I would appreciate any feedback once you have
access to the application.
To run the application, make sure you have a JRE 1.6
installed (JRE version 1.5 may work, but it untested). Unzip the files in
your favorite directory. Execute the jar file with a single text
parameter of a file path for the SPDX RDF Document.
On windows, this would be “java –jar SPDXPretty.jar
examples\zlib-1.2.5.spdxv3.rdf (assuming you copied the attached example file
into the same directory as the .jar file and your cd’d to that directory).
I made a few changes to the zlib example to bring it up to
date to the draft 20100731. It is in the zip file in the examples
directory.
I run into a few questions/issues as I implemented this,
outlined below:
·
Namespace and tags – I noticed in the example we
have only one namespace for SPDX and the tags used in the example did not match
the tags in the specification in all cases - e.g. License in the file is
tagged FileLicense in the example. Do we want to have separate namespaces
for File, License, and Document? If not, do we want the tags to be unique
(e.g. FileLicense and PackageLicense)? Technically, the tags don’t
need to be unique, but it may aid in humans reading the RDF/XML file.
·
I changed the tags in the example to match the
document in cases where they were still unique (e.g. ShortDescription -> ShortDesc)
·
License Names and Pretty Printing – I was only
able to extract the URL for the license (as a resource) from the SPDX document
which doesn’t lead to a very pretty license name. Should we add a
property License Name? Should I parse the URL and only print out the tag
(e.g. after the #)?
·
Example use of hasFile – In the example, the
object of the hasFile predicate for the package subject all have the same
URI. I believe these should be unique since they represent different file
objects. I changed the example to make these individual and unique.
·
The disjunctive licenses are implemented but not
tested.
·
There has not been much testing (Unit or
otherwise)
I would like to make the code available as an open source
project. It is written using Jena (http://jena.sourceforge.net/) and
contains a Java class which is a model basically wrapping a Jenna model of the
RDF document. It would probably be useful for many of you who are writing
tools.
I could post the code to SPDX, but I would rather maintain it
in a repository which supports svn. I’m thinking Google code may be a
good location. Open to suggestions.
As far a licenses, it’s currently under a 3 clause BSD since
it’s GPL compatible and simple. I’m open to other licenses, so let me
know if you have a preference – we could even create a nice complex set of
license choices ;) Do keep in mind this is dependent on Jena which is
licensed under a 3 clause BSD and contains some Apache licensed code.
Appreciate any comments.
Best regards,
Gary O’Neall
Source Auditor Inc.
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Hello world and additional licenses
Hello spdx mailing list I guess I am the first new subscriber, since you went public? My name is Soeren Rabenstein, I am in ASUSTeK's legal department since early 2009 and responsible for European legal compliance as well as implementation of a FOSS license compliance program. Thank you for creating the specification. We are very interested in bringing forward the standard, since "Software-BOMs" form a key element of our compliance program (we actually switched to the term "BOC"="Bill of Code", to avoid confusion with actual, physical BOMs) and supply chain management turned out to be the biggest challenge over here. As a first contribution, I compared the list of specified licenses in the spdx-draft with my own approval list. As a result I would like to propose the following licenses to be added to spdx. With the exception of the last item, these are all licenses I came across during my practice. I may add them myself through the wiki, but currently I cannot see a working wiki page on this. I am also happy to dig our more licenses that are not yet listed. License Identifier: ClArtistic Formal Name: Clarified Artistic License 1.0 URL: http://www.ncftp.com/ncftp/doc/LICENSE.txt License Identifier: XFree86-1.1 Formal Name: XFree86 License 1.1 URL: http://www.xfree86.org/current/LICENSE4.html License Identifier: Ruby Formal Name: Ruby License URL: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/LICENSE.txt License Identifier: RHeCos Formal Name: Red Hat eCos Public License v1.1 URL: http://ecos.sourceware.org/old-license.html License Identifier: eCos Formal Name: The eCos license version 2.0 URL: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/ecos-license.html License Identifier: OSSL Formal Name: OpenSSL License URL: ? (No direct web source known, license text therefore attached to this mail) License Identifier: ErlPL Formal Name: Erlang Public License Version 1.1 URL: http://www.erlang.org/EPLICENSE License Identifier: gsoPL Formal Name: gSOAP Public License Version 1.3b URL: http://www.cs.fsu.edu/~engelen/license.htmlLicense Identifier: SugPL Formal Name: SugarCRM Public License URL: http://www.sugarcrm.com/crm/SPLLicense Identifier: YPL Formal Name: Yahoo! Public License 1.1 URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/yahoo_public_license_1.1.html License Identifier: OLDAP-2.8 Formal Name: OpenLDAP Public License Version 2.8 URL: http://www.openldap.org/software/release/license.html License Identifier: ZimPL Formal Name: Zimbra Public License, Version 1.3 URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/zimbra-public-license-1-3.html ...AND OF COURSE ;) License Identifier: WTFPL Formal Name: Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License URL: http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/ Kind regards Soeren Rabenstein ____________________________________________________________ ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC. Soeren Rabenstein, LL.M. Legal Affairs Center - Legal Compliance Dept. 15, Li-Te Rd., Taipei 112, Taiwan Tel.: (+886) 2 2894 3447 Ext.2372 Fax.: (+886) 2 2890 7674 soeren_rabenstein@... ____________________________________________________________ ===================================================================================================================================== This email and any attachments to it contain confidential information and are intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it is addressed.If you are not the intended recipient or receive it accidentally, please immediately notify the sender by e-mail and delete the message and any attachments from your computer system, and destroy all hard copies. If any, please be advised that any unauthorized disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken or omitted in reliance on this, is illegal and prohibited. Furthermore, any views or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent those of ASUSTeK. Thank you for your cooperation. =====================================================================================================================================
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Re: Hello world and additional licenses
On Tue, Aug 10, 2010 at 11:30 PM, <Soeren_Rabenstein@...> wrote:
...AND OF COURSE ;)
License Identifier: WTFPL Formal Name: Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License URL: http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/
I have to agree with Soeren (welcome!). A standard can't be complete without it and the Beerware License Rev.42 (in a template form). -- --dmg --- Daniel M. German http://turingmachine.org
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Re: Hello world and additional licenses
On Wednesday 11 August 2010 08:30:14 Soeren_Rabenstein@... wrote: ...AND OF COURSE ;)
License Identifier: WTFPL Formal Name: Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License URL: http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/
Hi, just one point about this license - it was a problem for one of our major OEM customers. Through bugzilla, they requested that we change the expletive to something less problematic for them (IIRC we changed it to the Do What the Hell You Want Public License). It was the strangest legal patch I ever wrote :-) Ciaran -- Ciaran Farrell __o cfarrell@... _`\<,_ Phone: +49 (0)911 74053 262 (_)/ (_) SUSE Linux Products GmbH, GF: Markus Rex, HRB 16746 (AG Nürnberg) Maxfeldstrasse 5, 90409, Nuremberg, Germany /ˈkiː.ræn/
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Re: Hello world and additional licenses
Welcome, Soeren. Glad to have you aboard.
This is certainly fair discussion. The goal has been to have the standard license list cover a large majority of cases (Kate's been talking about 90% coverage). Beyond that we have provided a mechanism for including licenses that are not on the list, the main differences being that for the latter the user will include the text of the license in the SPDX file, not just a reference to our list.
So, that fact that you have run across a license in your work would not on the face say that it meets the criteria for being included on the list. Do you think the licenses you list are fairly common and would belong on the list for that reason? Or do you think our criteria are too tight and that we should try to be more comprehensive in our coverage?
Phil
L. Philip Odence Vice President of Business Development Black Duck Software, inc. 265 Winter Street, Waltham, MA 02451 Phone: 781.810.1819, Mobile: 781.258.9502
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
Hello spdx mailing list I guess I am the first new subscriber, since you went public? My name is Soeren Rabenstein, I am in ASUSTeK's legal department since early 2009 and responsible for European legal compliance as well as implementation of a FOSS license compliance program. Thank you for creating the specification. We are very interested in bringing forward the standard, since "Software-BOMs" form a key element of our compliance program (we actually switched to the term "BOC"="Bill of Code", to avoid confusion with actual, physical BOMs) and supply chain management turned out to be the biggest challenge over here. As a first contribution, I compared the list of specified licenses in the spdx-draft with my own approval list. As a result I would like to propose the following licenses to be added to spdx. With the exception of the last item, these are all licenses I came across during my practice. I may add them myself through the wiki, but currently I cannot see a working wiki page on this. I am also happy to dig our more licenses that are not yet listed. License Identifier: ClArtistic Formal Name: Clarified Artistic License 1.0 URL: http://www.ncftp.com/ncftp/doc/LICENSE.txt License Identifier: XFree86-1.1 Formal Name: XFree86 License 1.1 URL: http://www.xfree86.org/current/LICENSE4.html License Identifier: Ruby Formal Name: Ruby License URL: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/LICENSE.txt License Identifier: RHeCos Formal Name: Red Hat eCos Public License v1.1 URL: http://ecos.sourceware.org/old-license.html License Identifier: eCos Formal Name: The eCos license version 2.0 URL: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/ecos-license.html License Identifier: OSSL Formal Name: OpenSSL License URL: ? (No direct web source known, license text therefore attached to this mail) License Identifier: ErlPL Formal Name: Erlang Public License Version 1.1 URL: http://www.erlang.org/EPLICENSE License Identifier: gsoPL Formal Name: gSOAP Public License Version 1.3b URL: http://www.cs.fsu.edu/~engelen/license.htmlLicense Identifier: SugPL Formal Name: SugarCRM Public License URL: http://www.sugarcrm.com/crm/SPLLicense Identifier: YPL Formal Name: Yahoo! Public License 1.1 URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/yahoo_public_license_1.1.html License Identifier: OLDAP-2.8 Formal Name: OpenLDAP Public License Version 2.8 URL: http://www.openldap.org/software/release/license.html License Identifier: ZimPL Formal Name: Zimbra Public License, Version 1.3 URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/zimbra-public-license-1-3.html ...AND OF COURSE ;) License Identifier: WTFPL Formal Name: Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License URL: http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/ Kind regards Soeren Rabenstein ____________________________________________________________ ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC. Soeren Rabenstein, LL.M. Legal Affairs Center - Legal Compliance Dept. 15, Li-Te Rd., Taipei 112, Taiwan Tel.: (+886) 2 2894 3447 Ext.2372 Fax.: (+886) 2 2890 7674 soeren_rabenstein@...____________________________________________________________ ===================================================================================================================================== This email and any attachments to it contain confidential information and are intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it is addressed.If you are not the intended recipient or receive it accidentally, please immediately notify the sender by e-mail and delete the message and any attachments from your computer system, and destroy all hard copies. If any, please be advised that any unauthorized disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken or omitted in reliance on this, is illegal and prohibited. Furthermore, any views or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent those of ASUSTeK. Thank you for your cooperation. ===================================================================================================================================== <OpenSSL-License.txt><ATT00001..c>
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Re: Hello world and additional licenses
I know that the Ruby license is pretty common. I would vote to add that one.
Kim
Sent from my Verizon Wireless Phone
----- Reply message -----
From: "Philip Odence" <podence@...>
Date: Wed, Aug 11, 2010 6:33 am
Subject: Hello world and additional licenses
To: "<Soeren_Rabenstein@...>" <Soeren_Rabenstein@...>
Cc: "spdx@..." <spdx@...>
Welcome, Soeren. Glad to have you aboard.
This is certainly fair discussion. The goal has been to have the standard license list cover a large majority of cases (Kate's been talking about 90% coverage). Beyond that we have provided a mechanism for including licenses that are not on the list, the main differences being that for the latter the user will include the text of the license in the SPDX file, not just a reference to our list.
So, that fact that you have run across a license in your work would not on the face say that it meets the criteria for being included on the list. Do you think the licenses you list are fairly common and would belong on the list for that reason? Or do you think our criteria are too tight and that we should try to be more comprehensive in our coverage?
Phil
L. Philip Odence
Vice President of Business Development
Black Duck Software, inc.
265 Winter Street, Waltham, MA 02451
Phone: 781.810.1819, Mobile: 781.258.9502
podence@...<mailto:podence@...>
http://www.blackducksoftware.com
http://twitter.com/podence
http://www.linkedin.com/in/podence
http://www.networkworld.com/community/odence (my blog)
On Aug 11, 2010, at 2:30 AM, <Soeren_Rabenstein@...<mailto:Soeren_Rabenstein@...>> wrote:
Hello spdx mailing list
I guess I am the first new subscriber, since you went public?
My name is Soeren Rabenstein, I am in ASUSTeK's legal department since early 2009 and responsible for European legal compliance as well as implementation of a FOSS license compliance program.
Thank you for creating the specification. We are very interested in bringing forward the standard, since "Software-BOMs" form a key element of our compliance program (we actually switched to the term "BOC"="Bill of Code", to avoid confusion with actual, physical BOMs) and supply chain management turned out to be the biggest challenge over here.
As a first contribution, I compared the list of specified licenses in the spdx-draft with my own approval list. As a result I would like to propose the following licenses to be added to spdx. With the exception of the last item, these are all licenses I came across during my practice. I may add them myself through the wiki, but currently I cannot see a working wiki page on this.
I am also happy to dig our more licenses that are not yet listed.
License Identifier: ClArtistic
Formal Name: Clarified Artistic License 1.0
URL: http://www.ncftp.com/ncftp/doc/LICENSE.txt
License Identifier: XFree86-1.1
Formal Name: XFree86 License 1.1
URL: http://www.xfree86.org/current/LICENSE4.html
License Identifier: Ruby
Formal Name: Ruby License
URL: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/LICENSE.txt
License Identifier: RHeCos
Formal Name: Red Hat eCos Public License v1.1
URL: http://ecos.sourceware.org/old-license.html
License Identifier: eCos
Formal Name: The eCos license version 2.0
URL: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/ecos-license.html
License Identifier: OSSL
Formal Name: OpenSSL License
URL: ? (No direct web source known, license text therefore attached to this mail)
License Identifier: ErlPL
Formal Name: Erlang Public License Version 1.1
URL: http://www.erlang.org/EPLICENSE
License Identifier: gsoPL
Formal Name: gSOAP Public License Version 1.3b
URL: http://www.cs.fsu.edu/~engelen/license.html
License Identifier: SugPL
Formal Name: SugarCRM Public License
URL: http://www.sugarcrm.com/crm/SPL
License Identifier: YPL
Formal Name: Yahoo! Public License 1.1
URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/yahoo_public_license_1.1.html
License Identifier: OLDAP-2.8
Formal Name: OpenLDAP Public License Version 2.8
URL: http://www.openldap.org/software/release/license.html
License Identifier: ZimPL
Formal Name: Zimbra Public License, Version 1.3
URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/zimbra-public-license-1-3.html
...AND OF COURSE ;)
License Identifier: WTFPL
Formal Name: Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License
URL: http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/
Kind regards
Soeren Rabenstein
____________________________________________________________
ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC.
Soeren Rabenstein, LL.M.
Legal Affairs Center - Legal Compliance Dept.
15, Li-Te Rd., Taipei 112, Taiwan
Tel.: (+886) 2 2894 3447 Ext.2372
Fax.: (+886) 2 2890 7674
soeren_rabenstein@...<mailto:soeren_rabenstein@...>
____________________________________________________________
=====================================================================================================================================
This email and any attachments to it contain confidential information and are intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it
is addressed.If you are not the intended recipient or receive it accidentally, please immediately notify the sender by e-mail and delete
the message and any attachments from your computer system, and destroy all hard copies. If any, please be advised that any unauthorized
disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken or omitted in reliance on this, is illegal and prohibited. Furthermore, any views
or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent those of ASUSTeK. Thank you for your cooperation.
=====================================================================================================================================
<OpenSSL-License.txt><ATT00001..c>
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Re: Hello world and additional licenses
Soeren, welcome, and thanks for the incremental licenses -- Licenses that come up in day-to-day practice are high value for SPDX. Thanks, Tom
Tom Incorvia tom.incorvia@... Direct: (512) 340-1336 Mobile: (408) 499 6850
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
-----Original Message----- From: spdx-bounces@... [mailto:spdx-bounces@...] On Behalf Of Soeren_Rabenstein@... Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2010 1:30 AM To: spdx@... Subject: Hello world and additional licenses Hello spdx mailing list I guess I am the first new subscriber, since you went public? My name is Soeren Rabenstein, I am in ASUSTeK's legal department since early 2009 and responsible for European legal compliance as well as implementation of a FOSS license compliance program. Thank you for creating the specification. We are very interested in bringing forward the standard, since "Software-BOMs" form a key element of our compliance program (we actually switched to the term "BOC"="Bill of Code", to avoid confusion with actual, physical BOMs) and supply chain management turned out to be the biggest challenge over here. As a first contribution, I compared the list of specified licenses in the spdx-draft with my own approval list. As a result I would like to propose the following licenses to be added to spdx. With the exception of the last item, these are all licenses I came across during my practice. I may add them myself through the wiki, but currently I cannot see a working wiki page on this. I am also happy to dig our more licenses that are not yet listed. License Identifier: ClArtistic Formal Name: Clarified Artistic License 1.0 URL: http://www.ncftp.com/ncftp/doc/LICENSE.txt License Identifier: XFree86-1.1 Formal Name: XFree86 License 1.1 URL: http://www.xfree86.org/current/LICENSE4.html License Identifier: Ruby Formal Name: Ruby License URL: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/LICENSE.txt License Identifier: RHeCos Formal Name: Red Hat eCos Public License v1.1 URL: http://ecos.sourceware.org/old-license.html License Identifier: eCos Formal Name: The eCos license version 2.0 URL: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/ecos-license.html License Identifier: OSSL Formal Name: OpenSSL License URL: ? (No direct web source known, license text therefore attached to this mail) License Identifier: ErlPL Formal Name: Erlang Public License Version 1.1 URL: http://www.erlang.org/EPLICENSE License Identifier: gsoPL Formal Name: gSOAP Public License Version 1.3b URL: http://www.cs.fsu.edu/~engelen/license.htmlLicense Identifier: SugPL Formal Name: SugarCRM Public License URL: http://www.sugarcrm.com/crm/SPLLicense Identifier: YPL Formal Name: Yahoo! Public License 1.1 URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/yahoo_public_license_1.1.html License Identifier: OLDAP-2.8 Formal Name: OpenLDAP Public License Version 2.8 URL: http://www.openldap.org/software/release/license.html License Identifier: ZimPL Formal Name: Zimbra Public License, Version 1.3 URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/zimbra-public-license-1-3.html ...AND OF COURSE ;) License Identifier: WTFPL Formal Name: Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License URL: http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/ Kind regards Soeren Rabenstein ____________________________________________________________ ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC. Soeren Rabenstein, LL.M. Legal Affairs Center - Legal Compliance Dept. 15, Li-Te Rd., Taipei 112, Taiwan Tel.: (+886) 2 2894 3447 Ext.2372 Fax.: (+886) 2 2890 7674 soeren_rabenstein@... ____________________________________________________________ ===================================================================================================================================== This email and any attachments to it contain confidential information and are intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it is addressed.If you are not the intended recipient or receive it accidentally, please immediately notify the sender by e-mail and delete the message and any attachments from your computer system, and destroy all hard copies. If any, please be advised that any unauthorized disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken or omitted in reliance on this, is illegal and prohibited. Furthermore, any views or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent those of ASUSTeK. Thank you for your cooperation. ===================================================================================================================================== This message has been scanned for viruses by MailController - www.MailController.altohiway.com
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Re: Hello world and additional licenses
Hi Phil
Wouldn’t it make sense to include as many licenses as
possible? (except maybe the very strange ones)
Sure this will all more data to the specification. But limiting
the specification may bloat Software BOMs with license texts (which would be
required to be included under spdx, as I understand it).
If you want to limit the covered licenses, I still definitely would
vote for including
·
Ruby
·
Xfree
·
RhEcos and Ecos (the old version eCos is still surprisingly
often present in embedded devices, regardless of the fact that RedHat dropped
the project long time ago)
·
OSSL
·
OLDAP-2.8
Cheers
Soeren
From:
spdx-bounces@... [mailto:spdx-bounces@...] On Behalf
Of Philip Odence
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2010 6:33 PM
To: Soeren Rabenstein(Soeren Rabenstein, II.M.)
Cc: spdx@...
Subject: Re: Hello world and additional licenses
Welcome, Soeren. Glad to have
you aboard.
This is certainly fair
discussion. The goal has been to have the standard license list cover a large
majority of cases (Kate's been talking about 90% coverage). Beyond that we have
provided a mechanism for including licenses that are not on the list, the main
differences being that for the latter the user will include the text of the
license in the SPDX file, not just a reference to our list.
So, that fact that you have run
across a license in your work would not on the face say that it meets the
criteria for being included on the list. Do you think the licenses you list are
fairly common and would belong on the list for that reason? Or do you think our
criteria are too tight and that we should try to be more comprehensive in our
coverage?
Vice President of Business
Development
Black Duck Software, inc.
265 Winter Street, Waltham, MA
02451
Phone: 781.810.1819, Mobile:
781.258.9502
Hello spdx mailing list
I guess I am the first new subscriber, since you went public?
My name is Soeren Rabenstein, I am in ASUSTeK's legal department since early
2009 and responsible for European legal compliance as well as implementation of
a FOSS license compliance program.
Thank you for creating the specification. We are very interested in bringing
forward the standard, since "Software-BOMs" form a key element of our
compliance program (we actually switched to the term "BOC"="Bill
of Code", to avoid confusion with actual, physical BOMs) and supply chain
management turned out to be the biggest challenge over here.
As a first contribution, I compared the list of specified licenses in the
spdx-draft with my own approval list. As a result I would like to propose the
following licenses to be added to spdx. With the exception of the last item,
these are all licenses I came across during my practice. I may add them myself
through the wiki, but currently I cannot see a working wiki page on this.
I am also happy to dig our more licenses that are not yet listed.
License Identifier: ClArtistic
Formal Name: Clarified Artistic License 1.0
URL: http://www.ncftp.com/ncftp/doc/LICENSE.txt
License Identifier: XFree86-1.1
Formal Name: XFree86 License 1.1
URL: http://www.xfree86.org/current/LICENSE4.html
License Identifier: Ruby
Formal Name: Ruby License
URL: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/LICENSE.txt
License Identifier: RHeCos
Formal Name: Red Hat eCos Public License v1.1
URL: http://ecos.sourceware.org/old-license.html
License Identifier: eCos
Formal Name: The eCos license version 2.0
URL: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/ecos-license.html
License Identifier: OSSL
Formal Name: OpenSSL License
URL: ? (No direct web source known, license text therefore attached to this
mail)
License Identifier: ErlPL
Formal Name: Erlang Public License Version 1.1
URL: http://www.erlang.org/EPLICENSE
License Identifier: gsoPL
Formal Name: gSOAP Public License Version 1.3b
URL: http://www.cs.fsu.edu/~engelen/license.html
License Identifier: SugPL
Formal Name: SugarCRM Public License
URL: http://www.sugarcrm.com/crm/SPL
License Identifier: YPL
Formal Name: Yahoo! Public License 1.1
URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/yahoo_public_license_1.1.html
License Identifier: OLDAP-2.8
Formal Name: OpenLDAP Public License Version 2.8
URL: http://www.openldap.org/software/release/license.html
License Identifier: ZimPL
Formal Name: Zimbra Public License, Version 1.3
URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/zimbra-public-license-1-3.html
...AND OF COURSE ;)
License Identifier: WTFPL
Formal Name: Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License
URL: http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/
Kind regards
Soeren Rabenstein
____________________________________________________________
ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC.
Soeren Rabenstein, LL.M.
Legal Affairs Center - Legal Compliance Dept.
15, Li-Te Rd., Taipei 112, Taiwan
Tel.: (+886) 2 2894 3447 Ext.2372
Fax.: (+886) 2 2890 7674
soeren_rabenstein@...
____________________________________________________________
=====================================================================================================================================
This email and any attachments to it contain confidential information and are
intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it
is addressed.If you are not the intended recipient or receive it accidentally,
please immediately notify the sender by e-mail and delete
the message and any attachments from your computer system, and destroy all hard
copies. If any, please be advised that any unauthorized
disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken or omitted in reliance on
this, is illegal and prohibited. Furthermore, any views
or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent those
of ASUSTeK. Thank you for your cooperation.
=====================================================================================================================================
<OpenSSL-License.txt><ATT00001..c>
=====================================================================================================================================
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Re: Hello world and additional licenses
Hi Soren, Welcome. Glad to have your input :)
Wiki version of spec needs to be refreshed to correspond to the latest draft, and I'll try to work on it this weekend. If anyone else has time before, just let me know and I'll bounce you the raw doc file.
Can definitely add the licenses you list immediately below (I agree about eCOS - saw it alot), and if the others you sent earlier are commonly being encountered in analysis - then yes they should be included. Will add the short list below to the next draft, at least, and based on others input we can figure out what to do with the others ( how common is the WTFPL? ;) ).
There's 1900+ licenses out there, and we're just trying to keep the tracking of licenses to a reasonable level.
Thoughts on criteria to be listed are it must be present in significant number of packages already or strategic (ie. new one, anticipated to be present). What defines "significant" is a good topic for the next call on Aug 26th.
Kate
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--- On Wed, 8/11/10, Soeren_Rabenstein@... <Soeren_Rabenstein@...> wrote: From: Soeren_Rabenstein@... <Soeren_Rabenstein@...> Subject: RE: Hello world and additional licenses To: podence@... Cc: spdx@... Date: Wednesday, August 11, 2010, 6:44 AM
Hi Phil
Wouldn’t it make sense to include as many licenses as
possible? (except maybe the very strange ones)
Sure this will all more data to the specification. But limiting
the specification may bloat Software BOMs with license texts (which would be
required to be included under spdx, as I understand it).
If you want to limit the covered licenses, I still definitely would
vote for including
·
Ruby
·
Xfree
·
RhEcos and Ecos (the old version eCos is still surprisingly
often present in embedded devices, regardless of the fact that RedHat dropped
the project long time ago)
·
OSSL
·
OLDAP-2.8
Cheers
Soeren
From:
spdx-bounces@... [mailto:spdx-bounces@...] On Behalf
Of Philip Odence
Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2010 6:33 PM
To: Soeren Rabenstein(Soeren Rabenstein, II.M.)
Cc: spdx@...
Subject: Re: Hello world and additional licenses
Welcome, Soeren. Glad to have
you aboard.
This is certainly fair
discussion. The goal has been to have the standard license list cover a large
majority of cases (Kate's been talking about 90% coverage). Beyond that we have
provided a mechanism for including licenses that are not on the list, the main
differences being that for the latter the user will include the text of the
license in the SPDX file, not just a reference to our list.
So, that fact that you have run
across a license in your work would not on the face say that it meets the
criteria for being included on the list. Do you think the licenses you list are
fairly common and would belong on the list for that reason? Or do you think our
criteria are too tight and that we should try to be more comprehensive in our
coverage?
Vice President of Business
Development
Black Duck Software, inc.
265 Winter Street, Waltham, MA
02451
Phone: 781.810.1819, Mobile:
781.258.9502
Hello spdx mailing list
I guess I am the first new subscriber, since you went public?
My name is Soeren Rabenstein, I am in ASUSTeK's legal department since early
2009 and responsible for European legal compliance as well as implementation of
a FOSS license compliance program.
Thank you for creating the specification. We are very interested in bringing
forward the standard, since "Software-BOMs" form a key element of our
compliance program (we actually switched to the term "BOC"="Bill
of Code", to avoid confusion with actual, physical BOMs) and supply chain
management turned out to be the biggest challenge over here.
As a first contribution, I compared the list of specified licenses in the
spdx-draft with my own approval list. As a result I would like to propose the
following licenses to be added to spdx. With the exception of the last item,
these are all licenses I came across during my practice. I may add them myself
through the wiki, but currently I cannot see a working wiki page on this.
I am also happy to dig our more licenses that are not yet listed.
License Identifier: ClArtistic
Formal Name: Clarified Artistic License 1.0
URL: http://www.ncftp.com/ncftp/doc/LICENSE.txt
License Identifier: XFree86-1.1
Formal Name: XFree86 License 1.1
URL: http://www.xfree86.org/current/LICENSE4.html
License Identifier: Ruby
Formal Name: Ruby License
URL: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/LICENSE.txt
License Identifier: RHeCos
Formal Name: Red Hat eCos Public License v1.1
URL: http://ecos.sourceware.org/old-license.html
License Identifier: eCos
Formal Name: The eCos license version 2.0
URL: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/ecos-license.html
License Identifier: OSSL
Formal Name: OpenSSL License
URL: ? (No direct web source known, license text therefore attached to this
mail)
License Identifier: ErlPL
Formal Name: Erlang Public License Version 1.1
URL: http://www.erlang.org/EPLICENSE
License Identifier: gsoPL
Formal Name: gSOAP Public License Version 1.3b
URL: http://www.cs.fsu.edu/~engelen/license.html
License Identifier: SugPL
Formal Name: SugarCRM Public License
URL: http://www.sugarcrm.com/crm/SPL
License Identifier: YPL
Formal Name: Yahoo! Public License 1.1
URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/yahoo_public_license_1.1.html
License Identifier: OLDAP-2.8
Formal Name: OpenLDAP Public License Version 2.8
URL: http://www.openldap.org/software/release/license.html
License Identifier: ZimPL
Formal Name: Zimbra Public License, Version 1.3
URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/zimbra-public-license-1-3.html
...AND OF COURSE ;)
License Identifier: WTFPL
Formal Name: Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License
URL: http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/
Kind regards
Soeren Rabenstein
____________________________________________________________
ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC.
Soeren Rabenstein, LL.M.
Legal Affairs Center - Legal Compliance Dept.
15, Li-Te Rd., Taipei 112, Taiwan
Tel.: (+886) 2 2894 3447 Ext.2372
Fax.: (+886) 2 2890 7674
soeren_rabenstein@...
____________________________________________________________
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intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it
is addressed.If you are not the intended recipient or receive it accidentally,
please immediately notify the sender by e-mail and delete
the message and any attachments from your computer system, and destroy all hard
copies. If any, please be advised that any unauthorized
disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken or omitted in reliance on
this, is illegal and prohibited. Furthermore, any views
or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent those
of ASUSTeK. Thank you for your cooperation.
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<OpenSSL-License.txt><ATT00001..c>
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This email and any attachments to it contain confidential information and are intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it
is addressed.If you are not the intended recipient or receive it accidentally, please immediately notify the sender by e-mail and delete
the message and any attachments from your computer system, and destroy all hard copies. If any, please be advised that any unauthorized
disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken or omitted in reliance on this, is illegal and prohibited. Furthermore, any views
or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent those of ASUSTeK. Thank you for your cooperation.
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Re: Hello world and additional licenses
On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 06:33:01AM -0400, Philip Odence wrote: So, that fact that you have run across a license in your work would not on the face say that it meets the criteria for being included on the list. Do you think the licenses you list are fairly common and would belong on the list for that reason? Hi, (First, happy to join this list after attending the LinuxCon session yesterday.) Of the ones Soeren listed, the OpenSSL license (or, I guess, conjunction-of-licenses) stands out to me as one of the most commonly encountered (it is not 'common' in the sense of being reused by different projects, but because of the ubiquity of OpenSSL). Although this may not bear on criteria for list inclusion, it is also a license that often leads to angst for Linux distributions because of GPL incompatibility arguments and the presence of an advertising clause. - Richard Richard E. Fontana Open Source Licensing and Patent Counsel Red Hat, Inc. direct: +1 978 392 2423 mobile: +1 978 397 1504 fax: +1 978 392 1001 mail: rfontana@...
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Re: Hello world and additional licenses
Kate was right, I should have gone l,to LinuxConf
in the same line as Richard comment, why not include every license found in the Linux kernel?
I am sure many of you have customers that need this data for the kernel
in fact, last week I discuss that the kernel is a very good exercise to test the spec much better than simple examples. If it can do the kernel, it could do almost anything
---dmg
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On 8/11/10, Richard Fontana <rfontana@...> wrote: On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 06:33:01AM -0400, Philip Odence wrote:
So, that fact that you have run across a license in your work would not on the face say that it meets the criteria for being included on the list. Do you think the licenses you list are fairly common and would belong on the list for that reason? Hi,
(First, happy to join this list after attending the LinuxCon session yesterday.)
Of the ones Soeren listed, the OpenSSL license (or, I guess, conjunction-of-licenses) stands out to me as one of the most commonly encountered (it is not 'common' in the sense of being reused by different projects, but because of the ubiquity of OpenSSL). Although this may not bear on criteria for list inclusion, it is also a license that often leads to angst for Linux distributions because of GPL incompatibility arguments and the presence of an advertising clause.
- Richard
Richard E. Fontana Open Source Licensing and Patent Counsel Red Hat, Inc. direct: +1 978 392 2423 mobile: +1 978 397 1504 fax: +1 978 392 1001 mail: rfontana@... _______________________________________________ Spdx mailing list Spdx@... https://fossbazaar.org/mailman/listinfo/spdx
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Re: Pretty printer binaries available
Thanks Gary – thrilled that you contributed our first tool.
Although I explicitly specified ssl/tls, port 21, and accepted certificate, seems to be rejecting the password spdx1 for user spdx
re:”With respect to some of your earlier questions,
· License Names and Pretty Printing – I was only able to extract the URL for the license (as a resource) from the SPDX document which doesn’t lead to a very pretty license name. Should we add a property License Name? Should I parse the URL and only print out the tag (e.g. after the #)?”
---> I’d like to go with parsing the URL and printing out the tag (after the #).
We ought to have an RDF document on our site for each license, and the License Name is a property of each license.
re: “Namespace and tags – I noticed in the example we have only one namespace for SPDX and the tags used in the example did not match the tags in the specification in all cases - e.g. License in the file is tagged FileLicense in the example. Do we want to have separate namespaces for File, License, and Document? If not, do we want the tags to be unique (e.g. FileLicense and PackageLicense)? Technically, the tags don’t need to be unique, but it may aid in humans reading the RDF/XML file.”
---> I think it’s ok to adopt in the RDF the non-unique (shorter) tags as in the specification. On one of the calls, the vibe from the group was for the shorter tags. (e.g. ‘License’, not ‘FileLicense’). Unfortunately I never sent around a new example incorporating that feedback (by then the zilb example was making the rounds). I think it is acceptable and correct to keep it in the same namespace.
- Bill
On 8/10/10 11:19 PM, "Gary O'Neall" <gary@...> wrote:
I uploaded the pretty printer java program to the source auditor ftp server. It’s a secure web server, so I apologize in advance if it’s a bit inconvenient to download.
The ftp server is at ftp.sourceauditor.com <ftp://ftp.sourceauditor.com> You need to use explicit tls/ssl over port 21. Logon with user spdx and password spdx1
The file SPDXPretty.zip contains the files mentioned in the previous email (copied below).
Let me know if you need more information or if you have any problems.
Gary
From: package-facts-bounces@... [mailto:package-facts-bounces@...] On Behalf Of Gary O'Neall
Sent: Sunday, August 08, 2010 11:32 PM
To: package-facts@...
Subject: Java Pretty Printer
I completed an “alpha” version of a Java based pretty printer. It’s 10MB in binary form with its dependencies. Is there a place on the Wiki I can upload this to? I tried to add it to a page as an attachment to a new discussion page, but the .zip filetype was not allowed. Please advise on the best method to get this to the group.
Attached is a modified zlib example (see notes below on what items were changed) and an example output.
Below is some information and discussion points related to the pretty printer development:
I’m sure there are a few improvements to be made before calling this a “release”, but it does provide some formatting and works for the zlib example. I would appreciate any feedback once you have access to the application.
To run the application, make sure you have a JRE 1.6 installed (JRE version 1.5 may work, but it untested). Unzip the files in your favorite directory. Execute the jar file with a single text parameter of a file path for the SPDX RDF Document.
On windows, this would be “java –jar SPDXPretty.jar examples\zlib-1.2.5.spdxv3.rdf (assuming you copied the attached example file into the same directory as the .jar file and your cd’d to that directory).
I made a few changes to the zlib example to bring it up to date to the draft 20100731. It is in the zip file in the examples directory.
I run into a few questions/issues as I implemented this, outlined below:
· Namespace and tags – I noticed in the example we have only one namespace for SPDX and the tags used in the example did not match the tags in the specification in all cases - e.g. License in the file is tagged FileLicense in the example. Do we want to have separate namespaces for File, License, and Document? If not, do we want the tags to be unique (e.g. FileLicense and PackageLicense)? Technically, the tags don’t need to be unique, but it may aid in humans reading the RDF/XML file.
· I changed the tags in the example to match the document in cases where they were still unique (e.g. ShortDescription -> ShortDesc)
· License Names and Pretty Printing – I was only able to extract the URL for the license (as a resource) from the SPDX document which doesn’t lead to a very pretty license name. Should we add a property License Name? Should I parse the URL and only print out the tag (e.g. after the #)?
· Example use of hasFile – In the example, the object of the hasFile predicate for the package subject all have the same URI. I believe these should be unique since they represent different file objects. I changed the example to make these individual and unique.
· The disjunctive licenses are implemented but not tested.
· There has not been much testing (Unit or otherwise)
I would like to make the code available as an open source project. It is written using Jena (http://jena.sourceforge.net/) and contains a Java class which is a model basically wrapping a Jenna model of the RDF document. It would probably be useful for many of you who are writing tools.
I could post the code to SPDX, but I would rather maintain it in a repository which supports svn. I’m thinking Google code may be a good location. Open to suggestions.
As far a licenses, it’s currently under a 3 clause BSD since it’s GPL compatible and simple. I’m open to other licenses, so let me know if you have a preference – we could even create a nice complex set of license choices ;) Do keep in mind this is dependent on Jena which is licensed under a 3 clause BSD and contains some Apache licensed code.
Appreciate any comments.
Best regards,
Gary O’Neall
Source Auditor Inc.
Bill Schineller
Knowledge Base Manager
Black Duck Software Inc.
T: +1.781.810.1829
F: +1.781.891.5145
E: bschineller@...
http://www.blackducksoftware.com
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Re: Pretty printer binaries available
Thanks Bill for the reply. Sorry - I sent out the wrong username - it's spdx@.... Give that a try and let me know if you have any problems. Gary On Wed, 11 Aug 2010 15:12:29 -0400, Bill Schineller <bschineller@...> wrote: Thanks Gary - thrilled that you contributed our first tool. Although I explicitly specified ssl/tls, port 21, and accepted certificate, seems to be rejecting the password spdx1 for user spdx
re:"With respect to some of your earlier questions, * License Names and Pretty Printing - I was only able to extract the URL for the license (as a resource) from the SPDX document which doesn't lead to a very pretty license name. Should we add a property License Name? Should I parse the URL and only print out the tag (e.g. after the #)?"
---> I'd like to go with parsing the URL and printing out the tag (after the #).
We ought to have an RDF document on our site for each license, and the License Name is a property of each license.
re: "Namespace and tags - I noticed in the example we have only one namespace for SPDX and the tags used in the example did not match the tags in the specification in all cases - e.g. License in the file is tagged FileLicense in the example. Do we want to have separate namespaces for File, License, and Document? If not, do we want the tags to be unique (e.g. FileLicense and PackageLicense)? Technically, the tags don't need to be unique, but it may aid in humans reading the RDF/XML file."
---> I think it's ok to adopt in the RDF the non-unique (shorter) tags as in the specification. On one of the calls, the vibe from the group was for the shorter tags. (e.g. 'License', not 'FileLicense'). Unfortunately I never sent around a new example incorporating that feedback (by then the zilb example was making the rounds). I think it is acceptable and correct to keep it in the same namespace.
- Bill
On 8/10/10 11:19 PM, "Gary O'Neall" <gary@...> wrote:
I uploaded the pretty printer java program to the source auditor ftp server. It's a secure web server, so I apologize in advance if it's a bit inconvenient to download.
The ftp server is at ftp.sourceauditor.com <ftp://ftp.sourceauditor.com> You need to use explicit tls/ssl over port 21. Logon with user spdx and password spdx1
The file SPDXPretty.zip contains the files mentioned in the previous email (copied below).
Let me know if you need more information or if you have any problems.
Gary
From: package-facts-bounces@... [mailto:package-facts-bounces@...] On Behalf Of Gary O'Neall Sent: Sunday, August 08, 2010 11:32 PM To: package-facts@... Subject: Java Pretty Printer
I completed an "alpha" version of a Java based pretty printer. It's 10MB in binary form with its dependencies. Is there a place on the Wiki I can upload this to? I tried to add it to a page as an attachment to a new discussion page, but the .zip filetype was not allowed. Please advise on the best method to get this to the group.
Attached is a modified zlib example (see notes below on what items were changed) and an example output.
Below is some information and discussion points related to the pretty printer development:
I'm sure there are a few improvements to be made before calling this a "release", but it does provide some formatting and works for the zlib example. I would appreciate any feedback once you have access to the application.
To run the application, make sure you have a JRE 1.6 installed (JRE version 1.5 may work, but it untested). Unzip the files in your favorite directory. Execute the jar file with a single text parameter of a file path for the SPDX RDF Document.
On windows, this would be "java -jar SPDXPretty.jar examples\zlib-1.2.5.spdxv3.rdf (assuming you copied the attached example file into the same directory as the .jar file and your cd'd to that directory).
I made a few changes to the zlib example to bring it up to date to the draft 20100731. It is in the zip file in the examples directory.
I run into a few questions/issues as I implemented this, outlined below:
* Namespace and tags - I noticed in the example we have only one namespace for SPDX and the tags used in the example did not match the tags in the specification in all cases - e.g. License in the file is tagged FileLicense in the example. Do we want to have separate namespaces for File, License, and Document? If not, do we want the tags to be unique (e.g. FileLicense and PackageLicense)? Technically, the tags don't need to be unique, but it may aid in humans reading the RDF/XML file.
* I changed the tags in the example to match the document in cases where they were still unique (e.g. ShortDescription -> ShortDesc)
* License Names and Pretty Printing - I was only able to extract the URL for the license (as a resource) from the SPDX document which doesn't lead to a very pretty license name. Should we add a property License Name? Should I parse the URL and only print out the tag (e.g. after the #)?
* Example use of hasFile - In the example, the object of the hasFile predicate for the package subject all have the same URI. I believe these should be unique since they represent different file objects. I changed the example to make these individual and unique.
* The disjunctive licenses are implemented but not tested.
* There has not been much testing (Unit or otherwise)
I would like to make the code available as an open source project. It is written using Jena (http://jena.sourceforge.net/) and contains a Java class which is a model basically wrapping a Jenna model of the RDF document. It would probably be useful for many of you who are writing tools.
I could post the code to SPDX, but I would rather maintain it in a repository which supports svn. I'm thinking Google code may be a good location. Open to suggestions.
As far a licenses, it's currently under a 3 clause BSD since it's GPL compatible and simple. I'm open to other licenses, so let me know if you have a preference - we could even create a nice complex set of license choices ;) Do keep in mind this is dependent on Jena which is licensed under a 3 clause BSD and contains some Apache licensed code.
Appreciate any comments.
Best regards,
Gary O'Neall Source Auditor Inc.
Bill Schineller Knowledge Base Manager Black Duck Software Inc. T: +1.781.810.1829 F: +1.781.891.5145 E: bschineller@... http://www.blackducksoftware.com
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Re: Hello world and additional licenses
Yes, that's clearly the tradeoff, Soeren. I think the question is how "expensive" it is to add licenses to the list and maintain them. I suspect that as with the spec, we'll have a working area for candidate licenses and a process for promoting to the official list.
We had some in person discussion about this at the LinuxCon BoF session last night and it was clear that this subject needs more discussion and work. Thanks for joining in and shining some light on it.
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Hi Phil Wouldn’t it make sense to include as many licenses as possible? (except maybe the very strange ones) Sure this will all more data to the specification. But limiting the specification may bloat Software BOMs with license texts (which would be required to be included under spdx, as I understand it). If you want to limit the covered licenses, I still definitely would vote for including · Ruby · Xfree · RhEcos and Ecos (the old version eCos is still surprisingly often present in embedded devices, regardless of the fact that RedHat dropped the project long time ago) · OSSL · OLDAP-2.8 Cheers Soeren From: spdx-bounces@... [mailto:spdx-bounces@...] On Behalf Of Philip Odence Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2010 6:33 PM To: Soeren Rabenstein(Soeren Rabenstein, II.M.) Cc: spdx@... Subject: Re: Hello world and additional licenses Welcome, Soeren. Glad to have you aboard. This is certainly fair discussion. The goal has been to have the standard license list cover a large majority of cases (Kate's been talking about 90% coverage). Beyond that we have provided a mechanism for including licenses that are not on the list, the main differences being that for the latter the user will include the text of the license in the SPDX file, not just a reference to our list. So, that fact that you have run across a license in your work would not on the face say that it meets the criteria for being included on the list. Do you think the licenses you list are fairly common and would belong on the list for that reason? Or do you think our criteria are too tight and that we should try to be more comprehensive in our coverage? Vice President of Business Development Black Duck Software, inc. 265 Winter Street, Waltham, MA 02451 Phone: 781.810.1819, Mobile: 781.258.9502
Hello spdx mailing list I guess I am the first new subscriber, since you went public? My name is Soeren Rabenstein, I am in ASUSTeK's legal department since early 2009 and responsible for European legal compliance as well as implementation of a FOSS license compliance program. Thank you for creating the specification. We are very interested in bringing forward the standard, since "Software-BOMs" form a key element of our compliance program (we actually switched to the term "BOC"="Bill of Code", to avoid confusion with actual, physical BOMs) and supply chain management turned out to be the biggest challenge over here. As a first contribution, I compared the list of specified licenses in the spdx-draft with my own approval list. As a result I would like to propose the following licenses to be added to spdx. With the exception of the last item, these are all licenses I came across during my practice. I may add them myself through the wiki, but currently I cannot see a working wiki page on this. I am also happy to dig our more licenses that are not yet listed. License Identifier: ClArtistic Formal Name: Clarified Artistic License 1.0 URL: http://www.ncftp.com/ncftp/doc/LICENSE.txt License Identifier: XFree86-1.1 Formal Name: XFree86 License 1.1 URL: http://www.xfree86.org/current/LICENSE4.html License Identifier: Ruby Formal Name: Ruby License URL: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/LICENSE.txt License Identifier: RHeCos Formal Name: Red Hat eCos Public License v1.1 URL: http://ecos.sourceware.org/old-license.html License Identifier: eCos Formal Name: The eCos license version 2.0 URL: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/ecos-license.html License Identifier: OSSL Formal Name: OpenSSL License URL: ? (No direct web source known, license text therefore attached to this mail) License Identifier: ErlPL Formal Name: Erlang Public License Version 1.1 URL: http://www.erlang.org/EPLICENSE License Identifier: gsoPL Formal Name: gSOAP Public License Version 1.3b URL: http://www.cs.fsu.edu/~engelen/license.htmlLicense Identifier: SugPL Formal Name: SugarCRM Public License URL: http://www.sugarcrm.com/crm/SPLLicense Identifier: YPL Formal Name: Yahoo! Public License 1.1 URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/yahoo_public_license_1.1.html License Identifier: OLDAP-2.8 Formal Name: OpenLDAP Public License Version 2.8 URL: http://www.openldap.org/software/release/license.html License Identifier: ZimPL Formal Name: Zimbra Public License, Version 1.3 URL: http://www.zimbra.com/license/zimbra-public-license-1-3.html ...AND OF COURSE ;) License Identifier: WTFPL Formal Name: Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License URL: http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/ Kind regards Soeren Rabenstein ____________________________________________________________ ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC. Soeren Rabenstein, LL.M. Legal Affairs Center - Legal Compliance Dept. 15, Li-Te Rd., Taipei 112, Taiwan Tel.: (+886) 2 2894 3447 Ext.2372 Fax.: (+886) 2 2890 7674 soeren_rabenstein@...____________________________________________________________ ===================================================================================================================================== This email and any attachments to it contain confidential information and are intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it is addressed.If you are not the intended recipient or receive it accidentally, please immediately notify the sender by e-mail and delete the message and any attachments from your computer system, and destroy all hard copies. If any, please be advised that any unauthorized disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken or omitted in reliance on this, is illegal and prohibited. Furthermore, any views or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent those of ASUSTeK. Thank you for your cooperation. ===================================================================================================================================== <OpenSSL-License.txt><ATT00001..c> =====================================================================================================================================
This email and any attachments to it contain confidential information and are intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it
is addressed.If you are not the intended recipient or receive it accidentally, please immediately notify the sender by e-mail and delete
the message and any attachments from your computer system, and destroy all hard copies. If any, please be advised that any unauthorized
disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken or omitted in reliance on this, is illegal and prohibited. Furthermore, any views
or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent those of ASUSTeK. Thank you for your cooperation.
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Sorry about any confusion. As per the minutes of the 7/29 meeting, no meeting today. Next meeting is normal time, two weeks from today.
L. Philip Odence Vice President of Business Development Black Duck Software, inc. 265 Winter Street, Waltham, MA 02451 Phone: 781.810.1819, Mobile: 781.258.9502
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Peter Williams <peter.williams@...>
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Peter, The examples you cite are, as you speculated, out of date. We need to create some current ones. Getting the site up and running before LinuxCon was a bit of a scramble, though Martin did a great job getting it to the point of credibility, albeit with some holes. We'll be back on our biweekly meeting schedule starting a week from today. Phil
L. Philip Odence Vice President of Business Development Black Duck Software, inc. 265 Winter Street, Waltham, MA 02451 Phone: 781.810.1819, Mobile: 781.258.9502
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On Aug 18, 2010, at 7:45 PM, Peter Williams wrote: Hi all, While looking at the draft spec, i noticed that the specification examples page, < http://spdx.org/spec/examples>, is empty. However, there do seem to be some examples at < https://fossbazaar.org/wiki/spdx/examples>. Is this just a case of some missing links? Or are the examples on the wiki out-of-date? If those examples are up-to-date it would definitely ease understanding the spec. Peter Williams < http://www.openlogic.com> _______________________________________________ Spdx mailing list Spdx@...https://fossbazaar.org/mailman/listinfo/spdx
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fossbazaar wiki and LinuxCon followup
Just out of curiousity, what kind of wiki is FOSSBazaar using? It doesn't seem very full featured, so a lot of what I discussed doing at LinuxCon is going to be much more complicated. However, assuming that the wiki technology we use is flexible, I went ahead and implemented a very rough (and incomplete mockup) on the Fedora wiki (we're using mediawiki, which I know is capable of doing everything I'd described). Please take a look at it and let me know if it is something interesting to the group. https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/TomCallaway/SPDX_License_ListI put some notes there as well to explain things. If you have questions, hit me. :) ~tom
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