The Open Source Definition
Version 1.9
The indented, italicized sections
below appear as annotations to the Open
Source Definition (OSD) and are not
a part of the OSD. A plain version of
the OSD without annotations can be found
here.
A printable version of this
annotated page is available
here.
A
PDF poster of the OSD is also
available.
Introduction
Open source doesn't just mean access to
the source code. The distribution terms of
open-source software must comply with the
following criteria:
1. Free Redistribution
The license shall not restrict any party
from selling or giving away the software as
a component of an aggregate software
distribution containing programs from
several different sources. The license shall
not require a royalty or other fee for such
sale.
Rationale: By constraining
the license to require free
redistribution, we eliminate the
temptation to throw away many long-term
gains in order to make a few short-term
sales dollars. If we didn't do this,
there would be lots of pressure for
cooperators to defect.
2. Source Code
The program must include source code, and
must allow distribution in source code as
well as compiled form. Where some form of a
product is not distributed with source code,
there must be a well-publicized means of
obtaining the source code for no more than a
reasonable reproduction cost–preferably,
downloading via the Internet without charge.
The source code must be the preferred form
in which a programmer would modify the
program. Deliberately obfuscated source code
is not allowed. Intermediate forms such as
the output of a preprocessor or translator
are not allowed.
Rationale: We require
access to un-obfuscated source code
because you can't evolve programs
without modifying them. Since our
purpose is to make evolution easy, we
require that modification be made easy.
3. Derived Works
The license must allow modifications and
derived works, and must allow them to be
distributed under the same terms as the
license of the original software.
Rationale: The mere ability
to read source isn't enough to support
independent peer review and rapid
evolutionary selection. For rapid
evolution to happen, people need to be
able to experiment with and redistribute
modifications.
4. Integrity of The Author's Source Code
The license may restrict source-code from
being distributed in modified form only
if the license allows the distribution of
"patch files" with the source code for the
purpose of modifying the program at build
time. The license must explicitly permit
distribution of software built from modified
source code. The license may require derived
works to carry a different name or version
number from the original software.
Rationale: Encouraging lots
of improvement is a good thing, but
users have a right to know who is
responsible for the software they are
using. Authors and maintainers have
reciprocal right to know what they're
being asked to support and protect their
reputations.
Accordingly, an open-source
license must guarantee that
source be readily available, but may
require that it be distributed as
pristine base sources plus patches. In
this way, "unofficial" changes can be
made available but readily distinguished
from the base source.
5. No Discrimination Against Persons or
Groups
The license must not discriminate against
any person or group of persons.
Rationale: In order to get
the maximum benefit from the process,
the maximum diversity of persons and
groups should be equally eligible to
contribute to open sources. Therefore we
forbid any open-source license from
locking anybody out of the process.
Some countries, including the
United States, have export restrictions
for certain types of software. An
OSD-conformant license may warn
licensees of applicable restrictions and
remind them that they are obliged to
obey the law; however, it may not
incorporate such restrictions itself.
6. No Discrimination Against Fields of
Endeavor
The license must not restrict anyone from
making use of the program in a specific
field of endeavor. For example, it may not
restrict the program from being used in a
business, or from being used for genetic
research.
Rationale: The major
intention of this clause is to prohibit
license traps that prevent open source
from being used commercially. We want
commercial users to join our community,
not feel excluded from it.
7. Distribution of License
The rights attached to the program must
apply to all to whom the program is
redistributed without the need for execution
of an additional license by those parties.
Rationale: This clause is
intended to forbid closing up software
by indirect means such as requiring a
non-disclosure agreement.
8. License Must Not Be Specific to a
Product
The rights attached to the program must
not depend on the program's being part of a
particular software distribution. If the
program is extracted from that distribution
and used or distributed within the terms of
the program's license, all parties to whom
the program is redistributed should have the
same rights as those that are granted in
conjunction with the original software
distribution.
Rationale: This clause
forecloses yet another class of license
traps.
9. License Must Not Restrict Other
Software
The license must not place restrictions
on other software that is distributed along
with the licensed software. For example, the
license must not insist that all other
programs distributed on the same medium must
be open-source software.
Rationale: Distributors of
open-source software have the right to
make their own choices about their own
software.
Yes, the GPL is conformant with
this requirement. Software linked with
GPLed libraries only inherits the GPL if
it forms a single work, not any software
with which they are merely distributed.
10. License Must Be Technology-Neutral
No provision of the license may be
predicated on any individual technology or
style of interface.
Rationale: This provision
is aimed specifically at licenses which
require an explicit gesture of assent in
order to establish a contract between
licensor and licensee. Provisions
mandating so-called "click-wrap" may
conflict with important methods of
software distribution such as FTP
download, CD-ROM anthologies, and web
mirroring; such provisions may also
hinder code re-use. Conformant licenses
must allow for the possibility that (a)
redistribution of the software will take
place over non-Web channels that do not
support click-wrapping of the download,
and that (b) the covered code (or
re-used portions of covered code) may
run in a non-GUI environment that cannot
support popup dialogues.
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