| Richard Stallmann has an interesting piece on FLOSS and FOSS definition, containing this: > A researcher studying practices and methods used by developers in the free software community decided that these questions were independent of the developers' political views, so he used the term “FLOSS,” Unfortunately he doesn't name that researcher, whom he is attributing FLOSS to. Anyone knows? According to Stallmann "FLOSS" is the most inclusive term including open source with a non-free license though: > Thus, if you want to be neutral between free software and open source, and clear about them, the way to achieve that is to say “FLOSS,” not “FOSS.” So and I'm suprised by that, while L stands for libre according to Stallman, the acronym FLOSS is a actually a more liberal term because it is neutral to whether the software in question free or only open source. [0] https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/floss-and-foss.en.html |
The opensource definition [0] and free software definition [1] are similar enough in outcome (if not intent) that such a thing is basically impossible.
Last time I looked the only difference between the OSI's and FSF's lists of acceptable licenses was the OpenWatcom license, which requires you to release the source even when you just deploy it privately. This was a mistake on part of the OSI and should not have been accepted. At least Debian, Fedora and the FSF consider it to be unacceptable.
[0] https://opensource.org/osd [1] https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.en.html