Skip to main content

Home/ Advanced Concepts Team/ Group items matching "licensing" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
LeopoldS

Global Innovation Commons - 4 views

  •  
    nice initiative!
  • ...6 more comments...
  •  
    Any viral licence is a bad license...
  •  
    I'm pretty confident I'm about to open a can of worms, but mind explaining why? :)
  •  
    I am less worried about the can of worms ... actually eager to open it ... so why????
  •  
    Well, the topic GPL vs other open-source licenses (e.g., BSD, MIT, etc.) is old as the internet and it has provided material for long and glorious flame wars. The executive summary is that the GPL license (the one used by Linux) is a license which imposes some restrictions on the way you are allowed to (re)use the code. Specifically, if you re-use or modify GPL code and re-distribute it, you are required to make it available again under the GPL license. It is called "viral" because once you use a bit of GPL code, you are required to make the whole application GPL - so in this sense GPL code replicates like a virus. On the other side of the spectrum, there are the so-called BSD-like licenses which have more relaxed requirements. Usually, the only obligation they impose is to acknowledge somewhere (e.g., in a README file) that you have used some BSD code and who wrote it (this is called "attribution clause"), but they do not require to re-distribute the whole application under the same license. GPL critics usually claim that the license is not really "free" because it does not allow you to do whatever you want with the code without restrictions. GPL proponents claim that the requirements imposed by the GPL are necessary to safeguard the freedom of the code, in order to avoid being able to re-use GPL code without giving anything back to the community (which the BSD license allow: early versions of Microsoft Windows, for instance, had the networking code basically copy-pasted from BSD-licensed versions of Unix). In my opinion (and this point is often brought up in the debates) the division pro/against GPL mirrors somehow the division between anti/pro anarchism. Anarchists claim that the only way to be really free is the absence of laws, while non-anarchist maintain that the only practical way to be free is to have laws (which by definition limit certain freedoms). So you can see how the topic can quickly become inflammatory :) GPL at the current time is used by aro
  •  
    whoa, the comment got cut off. Anyway, I was just saying that at the present time the GPL license is used by around 65% of open source projects, including the Linux kernel, KDE, Samba, GCC, all the GNU utils, etc. The topic is much deeper than this brief summary, so if you are interested in it, Leopold, we can discuss it at length in another place.
  •  
    Thanks for the record long comment - am sure that this is longest ever made to an ACT diigo post! On the topic, I would rather lean for the GPL license (which I also advocated for the Marek viewer programme we put on source forge btw), mainly because I don't trust that open source is by nature delivering a better product and thus will prevail but I still would like to succeed, which I am not sure it would if there were mainly BSD like licenses around. ... but clearly, this is an outsider talking :-)
  •  
    btw: did not know the anarchist penchant of Marek :-)
  •  
    Well, not going into the discussion about GPL/BSD, the viral license in this particular case in my view simply undermines the "clean and clear" motivations of the initiative authors - why should *they* be credited for using something they have no rights for? And I don't like viral licences because they prevent using things released under this licence to all those people who want to release their stuff under a different licence, thus limiting the usefulness of the stuff released on that licence :) BSD is not a perfect license too, it also had major flaws And I'm not an anarchist, lol
Nina Nadine Ridder

Fla. airport gets OK for spaceport license - Space- msnbc.com - 0 views

  • Cecil Field becomes the country's eighth licensed commercial spaceport
  • In addition to suborbital passenger flights like those Virgin is offering, Cecil Field hopes to offer commercial orbital launch services
  •  
    Cecil Field becomes the country's eighth licensed commercial spaceport
LeopoldS

Nevada DMV Issues First Autonomous Vehicle Testing License to Google - 1 views

  •  
    Spooky cars on the road
  •  
    yes but they do not drink & drive
LeopoldS

Town of Deer Trail considering hunting licenses for unmanned aerial vehicles, bounties for drones - News Story - 1 views

  •  
    anticipating a trend ...?
Luís F. Simões

NASA Goddard to Auction off Patents for Automated Software Code Generation - 0 views

  • The technology was originally developed to handle coding of control code for spacecraft swarms, but it is broadly applicable to any commercial application where rule-based systems development is used.
  •  
    This is related to the "Verified Software" item in NewScientist's list of ideas that will change science. At the link below you'll find the text of the patents being auctioned: http://icapoceantomo.com/item-for-sale/exclusive-license-related-improved-methodology-formally-developing-control-systems :) Patent #7,627,538 ("Swarm autonomic agents with self-destruct capability") makes for quite an interesting read: "This invention relates generally to artificial intelligence and, more particularly, to architecture for collective interactions between autonomous entities." "In some embodiments, an evolvable synthetic neural system is operably coupled to one or more evolvable synthetic neural systems in a hierarchy." "In yet another aspect, an autonomous nanotechnology swarm may comprise a plurality of workers composed of self-similar autonomic components that are arranged to perform individual tasks in furtherance of a desired objective." "In still yet another aspect, a process to construct an environment to satisfy increasingly demanding external requirements may include instantiating an embryonic evolvable neural interface and evolving the embryonic evolvable neural interface towards complex complete connectivity." "In some embodiments, NBF 500 also includes genetic algorithms (GA) 504 at each interface between autonomic components. The GAs 504 may modify the intra-ENI 202 to satisfy requirements of the SALs 502 during learning, task execution or impairment of other subsystems."
LeopoldS

Meet The Man Who Paid A Record $335,000 For Virtual Property - Oliver Chiang - SelectStart - Forbes - 7 views

  •  
    does he also have to pay property tax?
  • ...4 more comments...
  •  
    "He says he made the purchase partly because he wants to be able to spend more time in the virtual world. Before, he was averaging 10 to 20 hours per week. He wants to be able to spend about 40 to 60 hours a week now, basically making running the virtual asteroid a full-time job. (He'll also be cutting back on the time he spends developing software in real life.)"
  •  
    From what I remember when I visited the developer/producer company HQ, he wouldn't have to pay any taxes. If he has a virtual business he might have to pay them a license fee. If you want to start a virtual bank, you would need to buy a banking license. The money thing is quite regulated in this enviroment, so probably that's why property prices can be quite high.
  •  
    Remember the study but have completely zapped that this was with this company ... GSP rules :-)
  •  
    so how does that state get his money from this type of economy? where is the VAT in there?
  •  
    Last time I checked the "state" was still loosing money. But their main income is the sale of resources. Mostly new land, but I believe at some point they wanted to sell their initial planet too.
Francesco Biscani

Slashdot Apple Story | Apple's iPhone Developer License Agreement Revealed - 1 views

  • The highlights: you can't disclose the agreement itself
  •  
    Juicy bits about the JesusPhone's developer program.
Friederike Sontag

Green patents corralled : Nature News - 0 views

  •  
    "Patents, licensing practices and technology transfer from rich to poor countries are major issues in the fight against climate change," says Ahmed Abdel Latif, the programme manager for intellectual property at the International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development
LeopoldS

TetGen: A Quality Tetrahedral Mesh Generator - 0 views

shared by LeopoldS on 21 May 11 - No Cached
  •  
    assume that this is enough space related to qualify for SOCIS ... ? is the license also compatible?
Francesco Biscani

California libraries gearing up for fight against Nature - 2 views

  • The library system of the University of California may call upon the schools' faculty to boycott journals originating from the Nature Publishing Group if they can't come to an agreement on licensing costs for journal access.
  •  
    It will be interesting to see how this will develop.
  •  
    "Nature will find a way", I guess
Juxi Leitner

Open-source hardware standards formally issued | Geek Gestalt - CNET News - 1 views

  •  
    useful for space?
LeopoldS

Solyndra, Solar-Panel Company Visited by Obama in 2010, Suspends Operation - Bloomberg - 1 views

  •  
    does not look good ....
1 - 12 of 12
Showing 20 items per page