| > This is basically an open source licence with an added restriction on commercial use. Adding that kind of restriction will make any license a non-OpenSource license. This is not orthogonal but an important aspect. Maybe a failing analogy helps here. From a linguistic point of view, the above is like saying: "Belarus is a democracy, with an added restriction regarding elections." > Note that "open source" != "under a OSI or FSF approved licence" This statement is plain wrong. OSI defined the term Open Source very precisely, so using it to describe non-compliant licenses is a clear misuse of that term. Even Microsoft doesn't do that, despite their power! Instead, they coined an own term to describe their less-restrictive activities: "Shared Source". (And yes, a small minority of Microsoft's Shared Source projects are also Open Source.) So although there are different opinions about which term to prefer, "Open Source" has technically the same meaning as "Free Software". This has been clearly stated by the Open Source movement from the very beginning. In other words, the term Open Source has been designed to be a byword for Free Software. You can find that in the early articles of ESR: http://www.catb.org/~esr/open-source.html Finally, note that this license won't ever be approved by neither OSI nor FSF, because it violates an essential freedom. Of course you can always say: "I don't care about that certain kind of freedom". That's okay. But then you should neither claim to do "Open Source" nor to do "Free Software". That's unfair on all real Open Source developers who grant that freedom. |
They may have given a definition but that does not give them a monopoly over usage of the term. Language does not have a One Definition Rule! For example, my dictionary states:
Under that definition the licence is most certainly open source. Indeed, this definition is more in line with what many people think when they hear "open source".I understand there are political reasons to have open source exactly equivalent with the OSI definition. However, this does not seem to have happened.