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Featured Entry Aug 14th, 2008, 8:45 pm
According to ChannelWeb a federal judge sitting in the US Court of Appeals has ruled that open source software licenses are legal under copyright law. This is a complete u-turn on a previous ruling which had thrown the not so small matter of open source licensing into something of a legal quagmire.
The case appears to have arisen out of a dispute, of all things, over the legality of an open source license for model railway control software after a developer gave another an 'artistic license' and that other then used it while developing a competing product.
Earlier, a court had decided that there was no violation of copyright law in the case, but rather it was a matter of contractual promise more than anything.
The higher court did not agree and has stated "copyright holders who engage in open source licensing have the right to control the modification and distribution of copyrighted material."
The case appears to have arisen out of a dispute, of all things, over the legality of an open source license for model railway control software after a developer gave another an 'artistic license' and that other then used it while developing a competing product.
Earlier, a court had decided that there was no violation of copyright law in the case, but rather it was a matter of contractual promise more than anything.
The higher court did not agree and has stated "copyright holders who engage in open source licensing have the right to control the modification and distribution of copyrighted material."
Tags: open source licensing copyright law news
This blog entry was written by Bill Andad, staff writer aka newsguy. It has been filed under the Software Development category. It has received 857 views, 0 comment(s), and 1 linkbacks. 2 voter(s) have rated this entry an average of 5 out of 5 stars. It was promoted to featured status Aug 14th, 2008.


