jtoole
Well-known member
I'm curious if anyone has any thoughts on "Open Hardware Licenses" (of various types) and how they can help or hurt the DIY community and this forum in general.
A friend of mine had found this license, called the TAPR Open Hardware License, and he has used it for several community and DIY projects (For the Sumthing project and other non-audio stuff). More info can be found here: http://www.tapr.org/OHL. Certainly others are available, some with more restrictions that may better suite particular designer's wishes. He is researching a newer option presently - this one is a bit dated and hasn't seen any updates, so may not have much community support.
To summarize the key features of this particular license, and how it might relate to DIY:
- Intended for hardware designs/products by focusing on the documentation required to build that product (schematics, board layouts, Gerber files, etc), and downstream manifestations of this documentation (PCBs, partially or fully assembled units or assemblies, etc).
- The primary version is focused on open, unrestricted use and the ability to freely create derived works (think freeware). An alternate version is also available that explicitly restricts commercial use, which may be more appropriate for some DIY projects where the designer wants to prevent others from commercializing the design without permission.
- Contains a so-called "viral" provision requiring derived works to be released under the same license (Similar to the GPL license in software). This means that one can not take the design and create a derived product without disclosing the original design, and also providing _complete_ rights via this license to the derived work. All changes must be documented and the original version must also be included with the new work (i.e. new and old schematics, etc). This is key for DIY because it ensures that any contributed work will stay fully open and any derived work will be contributed back to the community, with annotations about what changes were introduced and by whom.
- It protects/indemnifies the Licensor against any claims arising from a licensee's use of the design. This is key because it protects DIY designers from litigation related to faulty designs, mistakes on the builders part, etc.
...
Obviously a gray area would be the application of these licenses to designs that could be considered derived from other commercial works (clones). I'm not sure how this would work, but I suspect a potentially infringing design would not be protected by this license.
I'm not a lawyer of course, so take my layman's analysis w/ a grain of salt. ;D I can't speak to the practical protection afforded by these licenses when enough money and lawyers are thrown at them (anything is vulnerable w/ enough lawyers/money), but I think there is value in spelling out the terms in most cases.
At the least a license like this would make the expected terms of use very explicit and help the community regulate that others are complying as required. As with the free/open SW movement, the community can help in regulation, and with enough critical mass, even help to pursue violators collectively where this might be prohibitive for individuals (think the "free software foundation" which litigates on behalf of smaller parties and groups in the free/open software community).
Thoughts ???
jt
A friend of mine had found this license, called the TAPR Open Hardware License, and he has used it for several community and DIY projects (For the Sumthing project and other non-audio stuff). More info can be found here: http://www.tapr.org/OHL. Certainly others are available, some with more restrictions that may better suite particular designer's wishes. He is researching a newer option presently - this one is a bit dated and hasn't seen any updates, so may not have much community support.
To summarize the key features of this particular license, and how it might relate to DIY:
- Intended for hardware designs/products by focusing on the documentation required to build that product (schematics, board layouts, Gerber files, etc), and downstream manifestations of this documentation (PCBs, partially or fully assembled units or assemblies, etc).
- The primary version is focused on open, unrestricted use and the ability to freely create derived works (think freeware). An alternate version is also available that explicitly restricts commercial use, which may be more appropriate for some DIY projects where the designer wants to prevent others from commercializing the design without permission.
- Contains a so-called "viral" provision requiring derived works to be released under the same license (Similar to the GPL license in software). This means that one can not take the design and create a derived product without disclosing the original design, and also providing _complete_ rights via this license to the derived work. All changes must be documented and the original version must also be included with the new work (i.e. new and old schematics, etc). This is key for DIY because it ensures that any contributed work will stay fully open and any derived work will be contributed back to the community, with annotations about what changes were introduced and by whom.
- It protects/indemnifies the Licensor against any claims arising from a licensee's use of the design. This is key because it protects DIY designers from litigation related to faulty designs, mistakes on the builders part, etc.
...
Obviously a gray area would be the application of these licenses to designs that could be considered derived from other commercial works (clones). I'm not sure how this would work, but I suspect a potentially infringing design would not be protected by this license.
I'm not a lawyer of course, so take my layman's analysis w/ a grain of salt. ;D I can't speak to the practical protection afforded by these licenses when enough money and lawyers are thrown at them (anything is vulnerable w/ enough lawyers/money), but I think there is value in spelling out the terms in most cases.
At the least a license like this would make the expected terms of use very explicit and help the community regulate that others are complying as required. As with the free/open SW movement, the community can help in regulation, and with enough critical mass, even help to pursue violators collectively where this might be prohibitive for individuals (think the "free software foundation" which litigates on behalf of smaller parties and groups in the free/open software community).
Thoughts ???
jt