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The Licence Approval Process
Submitted by david_axmark on Mon, 2006-07-24 21:56. ::
- Choose a unique title for your license, different from any known
titles of licenses. In particular, make it different from any of the existing approved licenses (by name or category).
Hint: doing a Google search for "Your License Title" (including the
quotes) is useful. - Render the license in two formats: HTML and plain text. Put the
HTML version on a web page. We will convert it into the same style as
the existing approved licenses. You can help us by publishing it in
that style yourself to save us the conversion step. - Create a legal analysis of the license as it complies with the
terms of the Open Source Definition. Each paragraph of the license
should be followed by an explanation of how the paragraph interacts
with each numbered term of the Open Source Definition. The analysis
should come from a licensed practitioner of the law in your country.
Email this analysis to license-approval at our domain name,
opensource.org. This document will remain confidential to the Open
Source Initiative. - Prepare an email with three sections as described in the next
three paragraphs. Send that email to the license-discuss mailing list
(license-discuss at our domain name, opensource.org). The subject of
your message should be "For Approval:" followed by the name of your
license.- Tell us which existing OSI-approved license is most similar to
your license. Explain why that license will not suffice for
your needs. If your proposed license is derived from a license we have
already approved, describe exactly what you have changed. This
document is not part of the license; it is solely to help the
license-discuss understand and review your license. - Explain how software distributed under your license can
be used in conjunction with software distributed under other
open source licenses. Which license do you think will take
precedence for derivative or combined works? Is there any
software license that is entirely incompatible with your proposed
license?. - Include the plain text version of your license at the end of the
email, either as an insertion or as an attachment.
- Tell us which existing OSI-approved license is most similar to
- You are invited to follow discussion of the licenses by subscribing to
license-discuss-subscribe@opensource.org.
This mailing-list is archived here. - If license-discuss mailing list members find that the license does
not conform to the Open Source Definition, they will work with you to
resolve the problems. Similarly, if we see a problem, we will work
with you to resolve any problems uncovered in public comment. - As part of this process, we may also seek outside legal advice on
license issues. - Once we are assured that the license conforms to the
Open Source Definition and has
received thorough discussion on license-discuss or by other reviewers, and there are
no remaining issues that we judge significant, we will notify you that the
license has been approved, copy it to our website, and add it to the list
below.
QUICK FAQ: 1) The board meets as needed and on the first or second Wednesday of every month (the schedule varies, unfortunately).
Motions may be entered at any time but resolutions are only passed at
scheduled meetings or when all board members have voted via email. 2) You should
hear back from us within two months, unless we have unusually heavy travel schedules.

